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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Missouri
    Posts
    133

    Clipless on half, tennis on the other?

    I just got clipless pedals and shoes yesterday and am going out tomorrow to practice clipping in and out, and stopping and going. I did do some practicing in the bike shop and the hallway at my house. It definitely isn't as easy as I thought it was going to be... Last night I biked over to my Grandmother's house (one mile away) and decided to try riding with one road shoe and one tennis shoe. That way if I was going to have any problems, I would still be able to catch myself. (plus I would be returning in the dark...) Part of the reason I am wanting to be super careful is because I am still recovering from the wreck with the dogs, and don't want to screw up anything that is still trying to heal up. I haven't noticed that it screwed up my riding position at all. Fashion-wise I am sure it is hilarious. But fashion went the wayside once I started wearing bike shorts... Anyway, I am tossing around the idea of alternating shoes tomorrow to gain confidence, and then try both at the same time. What do you gals think??? Have any of you tried this? Pros, cons?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    Hey, I say do whatever works for you! Of course I can say that because I am STILL riding around with the clip-on cheater pedals that they use in the bike store for people who don't have bike shoes. I talked them into letting me have a set "until I got used to the clipless" pedals and I still haven't taken them off (despite dh's eye-rolling.). I had a fall about a week into riding and got scared. Now I often ride with only my right foot clipped in when I'm going uphill. I am terrified that I'll drop the chain when I'm going slow and fall again...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Paradise
    Posts
    696
    Liberty - I've read post upon post of going clipless before I took the plunge. I've only heard of one or two people using the one shoe theory. I considered it, but for me, the best option was to "poop or get off the pot" and go all the way the first time. It was two weeks before I feel. The fall wasn't so bad.

    Honestly you have to do whats best for you and what you feel comfortable with. Try it your way the first couple times. If it feels awkward or you simply don't like it, you can always try it with both shoes.
    ~Petra~
    Bianchiste TE Girls

    flectere si nequeo superos, Achaeronta movebo

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    melbourne
    Posts
    47
    I've read post upon post of going clipless before I took the plunge
    yep...I did the same thing.....read a gazillion posts. I got some shoes this week....finally. Then 2 days later...on my way home from work, I decided to stop in at my LBS and get some cleats fitted. Before I left I said "I'm not riding home clipped in though!" He said, "Why not?" well duhh.....
    Anyway....less than half way home..and on a quiet bike path....curiosity got the better of me.....ok...clip...in goes the right shoe. Not long later, clip...in goes the left shoe. Getting out was a little more effort! However, I was more daring than I thought I'd be. All the while wondering how the heck one is sposed to clip out when going up hill....coz when you stop pedalling uphill....well....the bike kinda doesn't keep going, does it?!
    As the bloke in the LBS said.....practice, practice, practice. and we all know how monotonous practicing anything can be. So I guess I'll be doing what everyone else does/has done - practice. The one shoe theory is an interesting idea though. Some people just try clipping in with one shoe for a while till they feel good enough to clip in with the other shoe.
    And I still spect that one day I'm gunna fall.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    2,506
    I think as long as you don't do it very long...

    It wouldn't have worked for me. I need the all or nothing approach.

    I fell down all over the place the first day. That's not as big a deal as it sounds though. In fact, I think it may be a useful skill to have, falling with minimum damage.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    28
    Quote Originally Posted by postiechic
    All the while wondering how the heck one is sposed to clip out when going up hill....coz when you stop pedalling uphill....well....the bike kinda doesn't keep going, does it?!
    Yup, my feelings exactly!! I went on a long MTB ride which was great for the first 10km downhill... but then... what goes down, must come up. 10km of STEEEEEEP uphill! I almost died when I saw it!! I ended up walking most of it, but I clipped in for a few sections that looked okay. One of them clearly looked easier than it was - I clipped in, rode up, the bike just stopped mid-motion and I couldn't clip out!!!! So, of course, I toppled over and slide down the hill bike n all... got a nice graze and a cut on my arm from it... After that, I only clipped in my right foot, and was fine.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Trondheim, Norway
    Posts
    1,469
    One advantage of the one-shoe-off-and-one-shoe-on technique could be that you get to practice spinning full circles with one foot and old-fashioned mashing with the other. Even with cleats and clipless pedals on both sides, I sometimes have to ride for a few yards with one or both feet unclipped, for instance because there's a bit of traffic and I'm maneuvering a curve -- not a good time to "grope" around to get the pedal turned up the right way and the cleat centered over the clip spot.
    Half-marathon over. Sabbatical year over. It's back to "sacking shirt and oat cakes" as they say here.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Missouri
    Posts
    133
    Well, no falls! I spent 30 mintues working on each side,with tennis on half and road on the other, and then biked with both road shoes on for about an hour. Every time I came up to a person walking I would unclip one foot. Practiced starting and stopping. I think it did help having ridden for awhile with toe clips on my other bike. I was used to being aware of the need for getting the foot ready to stop. All that said, I was finishing my ride and coasting up to my car when I realized about 3 feet away that I was going awfully slow and hadn't unclipped yet... Grabbed onto the car and unclipped. Disaster averted. All in all, it isn't such a big deal. But I am glad that I did ride with one tennis shoe and one road shoe for the first hour. It helped me relax and treat the whole issue as a non-event. Sometimes the build-up makes it seem more than it really is. The only 'con' I found was in having to switch shoes around. But that could be a 'pro' too, as you are forced to practice stopping at your car, getting off the bike, and doing the whole thing over again.

 

 

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