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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    755
    These stories make me scared to death to go clipless. I think I'll stick with toe clips.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    Best advice I ever got here at TE was about clipping in and out of pedals.

    And subsequently I share everytime the topic comes up and no-one has beaten me to it.

    Riding clipped into pedals is easy as long as you remember TWO things... yep, only two.

    1. Always unclip with the same foot (doesn't work so well for off-roaders, but if you are a roadie, you can do this). If you train your mind/foot to always unclip on the same side, in an emergancy/quick stop, your muscle memory will do what you expect to do.

    2. Turn your front wheel away from the foot you unclip. Your bike will always lean toward you and your foot will reach the ground before the rest of your body.


    Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
    "I will try again tomorrow".


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Switzerland
    Posts
    2,032
    Quote Originally Posted by gabriellesca View Post
    I have a bum ankle and have trouble with my range of motion and am terrified to go clipless!
    What's the best way to practice if you don't have a trainer?
    The angle you need to turn/twist to get out is actually quite small. So is the force required if the tension is not set very high.
    Surely a LBS would let you try before you buy?

    I spent Thu evening with my workmate who just got a new MTB with clipless and she did not fall, but we also just practiced around her neigborhood.

    First I had her hold on to a fence to try the first few times. then we practiced -
    In and out, in and out, first one foot with the other rested on the non-clip side of her pedal (she got one-sided ones), then stopping and starting, then in and out with both feet alternating while riding, finally both in, stopping, starting again. Maybe a quarter of an hour and 5 ins and outs?
    Then along some gravel paths in the park, & finally up a little incline, all very slow. Not even at the very end when I made an abrupt stop (unintended) and there was nowhere for her to go to get around me did she fall.
    Last edited by alpinerabbit; 04-13-2009 at 01:12 PM.
    It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.

    2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
    2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
    2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    561
    I have Look clipless on my road bike, plain ol' spds on my road bike, I have been riding clipless for years on my roadbike and a while on my Mtb, and I still fall over! I fall over regularly on the start of most rallies and organized rides, because I tempt fate by clipping in while going at a snail's pace.
    On my MTB, I keep the tension quite loose so that I can clip out quickly if I need to put a foot down. I have learned the uber-cool look of grabbing a tree and staying clipped in if I am waiting for people to catch up or we are resting...but I have also lost all my uber-cool when I push off and am in too tough a gear and fall over.
    I like the SPDs on my mtb much better than the Looks for ease of clipping in and out...and of course, the SPDS are set up to be easy. The Looks are great while I am pedaling, but if I am riding in traffic it is a pain.
    Keep your elbows in, tuck your chin and fall if you are going to fall. Then look up, grin, and hopefully someone is grinning back at you! The worst is when everyone is doing that "look-away-we- saw-nothing" thing.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    48
    I wonder what motorist think when they see up slowly fall over when we are at an almost complete standstill. They must laugh their heads off thinking we just plain can't ride a bike.

    When I was riding Shimano 747's, my cleat got stuck and I couldn't unclip, over I went. It must have looked like Laugh In.

    Now I have Crank Bros. Candy SL and love them, absolutely no problems getting in or out and have never come close to being stuck in them.

    The likelihood of falling over in clipless are probably pretty good, but most of the time you are not going very fast so it's really no big deal, more bruised ego then anything.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Wiscaaaaansin
    Posts
    24

    ahh

    I remember my first clipped in ride...I feel after "forgetting" to unclip the pain of hitting the ground "helped" me remember...LOL!!

    I also Rode around for like a 1/2 hour clipping and un-clipping over and over...became a habit.

    When I race BMX you only have like 10 seconds to clip in before they drop the gate, so you have to have a "system" down.
    Last edited by MRS HORSEPOWER; 04-21-2009 at 08:33 PM.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Indiana
    Posts
    97
    Well, I went for a 10 mile ride today, my second ride on my eggbeaters and everything went great. My DH and I were just riding along when suddenly he got to close to the edge of the road and went off, but he was weaving everywhere, so I just braked really hard, to get out of the way. And at the last second i was like oh crap, I gotta unclip!!!! Well i did just in time, I didn't fall over and neither did my DH, he recovered nicely!!!
    ~~Help me in the fight to cure diabetes, by either joining my team, "The Freedom Riders" at http://main.diabetes.org/goto/thefreedomriders, or by donating at http://main.diabetes.org/goto/jake for the Tour de Cure in Indianapolis, Indiana on June 12, 2010~~

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    273
    Ahhh, the wonders of going clipless! How well I remember my experience learning to clip in/ clip out.

    My first clipless pedals were Performance Bicycle house-brand cheapies that came with a really bad pair of clipless shoes. They looked sort of like this, only cheaper and flimsier:



    I see that Performance no longer sells a house brand clipless pedal. Possibly because of recalls in the late 90's. They wouldn't be the first company damaged by quality problems when dealing with crap made in China.

    The pedals on my new bike (Terry Madeleine) are clipless on one side and platform (regular pedal) on the other, so if I want to hop on without clipping in, my foot won't be constantly slipping off the tiny profile presented by purely clipless pedals. They're also Real Shimano's



    These are nice, substantial pedals. I like them. Toe clips and cages scare the holy livin' crap out of me and there's no way I would even CONSIDER tying myself to the bike that way.

    *SHUDDER*

    When I first got clipless pedals, I actually carried handiwipes (for cleaning off road grit and ground in dirt), large gauze pads, adhesive tape, and various antibacterial agents in the car because it was a given that I was going to come back banged up, scraped up, and bleeding.

    This wasn't because I kept falling off, although I did that a time or two. Or three. No, it was because I kept scraping my legs on the pedals themselves. Don't ask me how. I could never figure it out, nor could anyone watching me (and I guarantee you, pretty soon I had the WHOLE BIKE CLUB watching me trying to figure it out).

    I think I just had a pair of bloodthirsty vampire pedals. They had to be lunging out at me to get a bite. There's just no other explanation. Beware cheap stuff, for one way or another, you pay for it. Apparently I was paying in blood.

    The first time I rode with the clipless pedals was on a group ride (of course it would be, so the greatest possible number of people could witness my humiliation). We had barely started, coasted up to a stop sign, came to a gradual stop, I went to put my foot down and found it glued to the bike. Slowly, slowly, and oh so gracefully (not!) I listed to the left and fell over. The guy nearest me turned at the sound of the crash, looked at me calmly as I lay there stunned and entangled with my bike, and brightly said, "New clipless pedals?"

    Well. I got used to them and I rode clipped in for a couple of years before giving up the old almost-fits-bike (though I didn't know that at the time). I had moved to rural MO from "bike-friendly" Portland, OR, and I was living 5 miles down a dirt road. The nearest pavement had about 3" of berm, then it generally either ran into a 50' high wall of rock, or it dropped off into a 30' ditch. And people driving down the county road believed they owned BOTH lanes. Trust me, it wasn't a place to be on a road bike. I'm pretty sure the local wolf population may have mistaken me for a deer had I tried.

    Then about 3 years ago I went back to school and decided, since I was once again living surrounded by actual pavement, to try cycling again. Hauled out the old almost-fits Trek and discovered I couldn't get more than about 10 miles before I was in excruciating agony. At first I thought it was the fact that I had aged almost 10 years since last being on a bike, but eventually I convinced myself to try a Terry. The Terry was great! I put 126 miles on it the first two weeks I had it. I put the Real Shimano clipless pedals on it and (one would think) I was all set!

    Here's the thing. In the nearly 3 years since I've had the bike - call it two, since I was unable to ride all last year due to an injury that resulted in frozen shoulder - I have never clipped in. Not once. I wear the shoes. I have the clipless side up. And before you know it, lickety split, I've flipped the pedal over to the "plain" side, vowing that NEXT TIME FOR SURE, I will clip in.

    I'm not new to clipless pedals. It was not particularly traumatic for me to learn to use them the first time (well, other than the vampiric nature of the things, which this pair has never shown).

    I have clipped in and out to make sure the tension is right, that I've got that heel twist down.

    Yet when it comes to clipping in for real, I CANNOT bring myself to do it.

    Riddle me THAT, Batman.
    By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
    - Khuddhaka Patha

    The word of God comes down to man as rain to soil, and the result is mud, not clear water
    - The Sufi Junayd



 

 

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