Thankfully, I've not had to deal with such conditions....
However, I'd check the icebike website.
I've also found the advice here: http://www.blayleys.com/articles/Win...wintertips.htm to be very helpful. Mass winters sound similar...
CA
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I've so enjoyed commuting on my little Trek 830 during the spring/summer!!!
Since my move, my commute was trimmed down from 6 flat miles round trip to only 2 (very hilly) miles. Needless to say, I'm kind of a wimp in the cold weather. I can bare the cold but hate wetness.
I love riding my bike but I'm slightly terrified of the winter. Michigan winters can be slushy, cold, slippery, and salty.
I would appreciate any advice/suggestions about gear/chain lube/modifications/maintenance tips you would share to help motivate and prepare me for the snow!
My one thought was to just commute in grubby clothes that can/will be wet and change when I get to work (including shoes). I'm thinking I may need waterproof panniers for the winter for my clothes and to protect against the salt/dirt.
If possible, I would like to keep my winter prep purchases around or under $100-$150 (excluding the new jacket I'm planning to get anyway).
Thanks in advance!![]()
Ana
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2009 Lynskey R230
Trek Mountain Track 850
Thankfully, I've not had to deal with such conditions....
However, I'd check the icebike website.
I've also found the advice here: http://www.blayleys.com/articles/Win...wintertips.htm to be very helpful. Mass winters sound similar...
CA
Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...
I ruined a really nice mountain bike commuting through the winter in Lansing, Michigan.
Salt is baaaaad. Wet salt is veeeeeery bad.
I'd get ahold of the TriCounty bike club or the Ann Arbor bike club and ask folks how they do it. (without ruining their bikes... hindsight is 20/20)
Last edited by KnottedYet; 08-23-2008 at 05:50 PM.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
I somehow managed a winter quarter commute to school when I was in college in Rochester, NY.... (no drivers license and public transit was bad to say the least). I think I've managed to block most of it from my memory.... I remember it was usually icy and I put cross tires on my touring bike, but I don't recall making any other modifications. I think in Rochester they did not salt the roads much... they just scraped off most of the snow and everyone rode around on about 1/2 inch of ice all winter long, since putting the plow blade all the way down dulls the blades and tears up the roads.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
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The trouble is that I am not involved in a cycling clubI have been wanting to join one but was too late in the game this summer to proactively seek one out
I worry a lot that riding in a group will make me feel terribly inadequate, since I am so slow on the hills!![]()
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Ana
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2009 Lynskey R230
Trek Mountain Track 850
You don't have to ride with a group to ask them questions.
"Chainwheel Chatter" folks (TriCounty) are very nice about helping, whether they know you or not.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
I'm in Jackson, and probably too sissified to commute in the winter, especially since I've already proven I'm too sissified to commute at all! I would like to ride at least, especially since I've really gotten into committing myself to doing more miles than I ever did before.
It's absolutely not an answer to your question, but 2 miles is not a very long distance. You could fast-walk it on some days when it's really bad and you don't want to take your bike. I walked 3 km (about 1.9 miles) each way to work in the Montreal winter. Not quite as wet as Chicago perhaps, but often very cold, very humid, and very slushy. Having good boots made it work. It took me just over half an hour, and was very invigorating.
For the other days... you might be inspired by the Chicago Bike Winter folks:
http://bikewinter.org/main.php
Matchmaking!!!
beccaB and Ana, start riding together!!!
This is how TE ride/eat/drink groups get started!
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Slushy/slippery conditions are the worst, I have to say. Rain is wet (duh) and cold, cold is just cold, but the intermediate cr@p around freezing is the worst of both. And salt eats your bike. That said, you might be surprised at how many commutes are quite nice in winter, and how just a small handful are in bad conditions. Commuting daily you get into a different mindset and dress for bad weather anyway. I'm never as cold as when I wimp out and take the metro, dressed in wimpy thin office clothes..
If you can afford them and you do get ice, I'd recommend at least one studded tire, in front. It gives you much needed traction for steering. It doesn't matter as much if your rear tire slips, you just end up on your feet. You'll want fenders, and you can tack on half a plastic bottle to extend them if they're a bit skimpy. And if you can, hosing your bike down gently, leaving it somewhere warm to dry, and relubing the chain at least once a week, maye even daily, helps greatly against the salt. And you need LIGHTS. The small blinky diode ones are cheap and quite visible, get several and make sure you can be seen from several directions.
Winter riding is much less about badassery and much more about bundle-uppery. - malkin
1995 Kona Cinder Cone commuterFrankenbike/Selle Italia SLR Lady Gel Flow
2008 white Nakamura Summit Custom mtb/Terry Falcon X
2000 Schwinn Fastback Comp road bike/Specialized Jett
They say there is no bad weather- only bad clothing.
I used to hate winter and froze my but off everywhere for YEARS. Then I got good wool outdoor clothes and discovered I was suddenly way comfy even in zero degrees! It opened the whole world up to me and now I love nothing more than to fitness walk, bike, and snowshoe in the winter.
I'm with Grog. I'd be walking that commute in the winter! It's far easier to stay warm while walking than on a bike. You say it's 2 miles ROUND TRIP?- one mile is a very short walk once you get used to it. Very healthy thing to do. It'll save your bike from wet salt conditions, too.
Getting some good insulated hiking boots and good wool socks will cost under $150.
Think wool to keep warm but well ventilated. Forget about cotton or acrylic sweaters or sweatshirts in the winter.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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Perhaps walking is the best option to save my bike from the salt...I just love riding my bike so much that I can't imagine not riding it when I can...bikes want to be ridden, right?Maybe I'll have to get over that.
I hate walking in the snow. Biking is so much faster.
::sigh::
Ana
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2009 Lynskey R230
Trek Mountain Track 850
I second these suggestions. For lube, be sure to get a nice waterproof "wet" Teflon one -- summertime "dry" lube will just wash right off in nasty weather. If you can't wash your bike off, at least wipe it down thoroughly after EVERY commute, especially the chain, cassette, and chainrings. Rust develops on chains incredibly quickly, and it's impossible to really get off well. With the salt factor, your entire bike will rust if you don't take extra-good care of it.
That said, +1 on the walking option. Ride when it's cold but clear; walk when it's nasty. That would save you lots of $ in the long run on bike repairs. (This winter was so hard on my bike, it would cost $600 to repair it -- that's $100 more than I paid for it 10 years ago!) Around here in MA, anyway, we tend to have enough cold, clear days that winter riding can really be beautiful.
As for warmth, layer up, especially on feet and hands. Experiment and you'll find what works for you.
I'd like to bike with KnottedYet, but Jackson is 45 minutes by car from Ann Arbor. Maybe we will run into each other somewhere. Are you going to do the Cereal City Century-Knotted?
Correction-Ana, whos' apparently from Ann Arbor, not Knotted yet. I didn't read it carefully enough.