An Ode to the Laptop Pannier - DIY Project

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Parag Patankar

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Oct 1, 2011, 12:27:19 PM10/1/11
to bangalore-bikers, GGI-Club (Go Green Initiator's Club)

An Ode to the Laptop Pannier - DIY Project by Parag Patankar


Happily riding for 3 years as a Velo commuter

Grew weary of lugging around my computer

Presenting the tale of my humble hack

To get the Darn Laptop off my Back

I have been bike commuting to work for 3 years now, got tired of carrying my laptop in my Backpack, due to the weight as well as the sweat. Tried a Bike rack, but the vibration was just too high, dropped that idea, and went back to backpacking for another few months. Finally figured out that a DIY vertical suspension Laptop Pannier is the answer. Been lazy about writing it up, finally on a flight today, with no internet connection, inspiration struck ;-)

The End Product- Pannier Mounted on the Bike

PICT1945 (Small).JPG

Design Objectives

1.       Small (no heel strike) but Sturdy enough to carry Laptop safely

2.       Waterproof, Accidental Drop and Hit Resistant

3.       Have suspension to Minimize road shocks

4.       Easy to Detach and carry

Key Constraints

1.       Should be a reasonable total cost (Budget Rs 1000)

2.       Should be completed in a reasonable amount if time (2 Months)

Total Project Time: 6 Weeks. Initial Research/Design – 3 Weeks, Execution 3 weeks

These are elapsed times, actual working time was about 1 day per week, mostly Sundays (sacrificed Sunday long rides).

Total Project Cost: Rs 200

Purchased Components: Hanger Hook 1 (5 rs), Pipe Bracket 1 (5 rs) , Clips (“Dog Chain Clips” as per the Hardware store guy) – 5nos ( Rs 75) , Bungee Cord 1- Rs 40, Nuts,Bolts,Washers (Rs 25)

Reused Components: Toshiba Laptop Bag which was lying in office, Plastic name Plate

Design

I started off with the usual Google search and reading up all I could find on Laptop Panniers, and shock proof suspensions, even non bicycle ones just to understand shock proof carrier dynamics and design. I finalized on a suspension with a triangular bungee cord, secured to the cycle frame at the bottom,and hooks clipped to the bike rack at the top. This would give it enough vertical and horizontal sway to minimize any shocks as I rode thru potholes or did the occasional hop onto the pavement and back. The weight would be mostly carried by the hooks embedded on the top end of the bag. The hooks would hang off the bike rack, and be fastened to the bag using nuts and bolts. The bolts would be threaded through a stiff plate to achieve a more uniform load on the bag instead of point loads which could end up tearing the bag fabric. The laptop itself would be placed in a Neoprene sleeve (from my Targus Backpack) that is waterproof and well padded.

For Extra rain/crash cover, the Existing Targus backpack carries my Tiffin, and is put on top of the rack, partly overhanging the vertical pannier. This would also be the Plan B in case the Pannier fails suddenly and I need to somehow carry the laptop home. 

Execution

Then after locking down on the design, I started the hunt for the components—this was the hardest part of the project, I had to tramp around town, visited at least 50 hardware stores to find the right stuff, and made a few design changes on the way. Original idea of using S hooks changed to using the Dog Clips which were easier to mount, and has swiveling heads, giving the suspension even more play to absorb bumps.

Assembly and testing was done over 2 weekends. The highlight was poking holes in the plastic sheet with a nail heated on the gas flame (and a DIY soup on the other burner), son walks in and says “papa are you cooking nails and soup for dinner?. Needless to say the DIY (pumpkin/lauki combo) soup was declared to be as inedible as the nails by dear son, he is at a stage where he is suspicious of any food that did not sing or dance on TV, or was not brought home in a shiny packag

Testing

Load testing was done with about 5 Kg’s of books (laptop itself is 2 Kgs ). Walked (Jolted ) the cycle down 11 flights of stairs to test out the suspension, and it stood up well. Splashed some water and that was fine too. 

Actual Usage Report

I have been using it for my daily commute for over 2 months now. It is great, and now I cant even think of lugging a big sweaty backpack around. It has survived a small fall which cracked my iphone touchscreen but did not damage the laptop, but the iphone was negligence on my part, had just finished a call and put the phone in the shirt pocket, and it plopped out when I fell. The Bangalore monsoon has validated the waterproofing also, it has endured 4 episodes where I was completely drenched to the bone, and a few small drizzles, no water seepage inside.

Pic: Proud (and very wet and dripping) inventor with the absolutely dry laptop. Wife definitely thought I am nuttier than usual when I arrived grinning from ear to ear and demanded she take a snap while I stood dripping all over the doorway.

PICT1918 (Small).JPG


If you managed to read all the way to the end, congratulations, you deserve a bonus. A PDF file with more high resolution images and design details is loaded here.

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0B-TG7beWkMaVZjczMzg3ZjgtZGI0MS00NzFlLWI1ZjItOWFlMmM5MTkwMzZj&hl=en_US

PICT1945 (Small).JPG
PICT1918 (Small).JPG

R. Venkatachalam

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Oct 1, 2011, 12:44:30 PM10/1/11
to bangalor...@googlegroups.com, bangalore-bikers, GGI-Club (Go Green Initiator's Club)
Good one, very useful stuff.... 

Kishan Kumar

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Oct 1, 2011, 10:07:05 PM10/1/11
to parag.p...@gmail.com, bangalore-bikers, GGI-Club (Go GreenInitiator's Club)
Hey, this is great Parag! Thanks for sharing! DIY is always cool and satisfying also!

Sent from my iPhone


On Oct 1, 2011, at 9:57 PM, Parag Patankar <parag.p...@gmail.com> wrote:

An Ode to the Laptop Pannier - DIY Project by Parag Patankar


Happily riding for 3 years as a Velo commuter

Grew weary of lugging around my computer

Presenting the tale of my humble hack

To get the Darn Laptop off my Back

I have been bike commuting to work for 3 years now, got tired of carrying my laptop in my Backpack, due to the weight as well as the sweat. Tried a Bike rack, but the vibration was just too high, dropped that idea, and went back to backpacking for another few months. Finally figured out that a DIY vertical suspension Laptop Pannier is the answer. Been lazy about writing it up, finally on a flight today, with no internet connection, inspiration struck ;-)

The End Product- Pannier Mounted on the Bike

<PICT1945 (Small).JPG>

<PICT1918 (Small).JPG>


If you managed to read all the way to the end, congratulations, you deserve a bonus. A PDF file with more high resolution images and design details is loaded here.

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0B-TG7beWkMaVZjczMzg3ZjgtZGI0MS00NzFlLWI1ZjItOWFlMmM5MTkwMzZj&hl=en_US

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anilk...@gmail.com

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Oct 2, 2011, 1:11:14 AM10/2/11
to Parag Patankar, bangalor...@googlegroups.com, GGI-Club (Go Green Initiator's Club)
Parag,

Wow.....awesome.....great amount of effort and patience, thank you for sharing!!!!

Anil s kadsur

Sent on my BlackBerry® from Vodafone


From: Parag Patankar <parag.p...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 1 Oct 2011 21:57:19 +0530
To: bangalore-bikers<Bangalor...@googlegroups.com>; GGI-Club (Go Green Initiator's Club)<ggi-...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [BBC] An Ode to the Laptop Pannier - DIY Project
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biking conversations on the world famous "Bangalore Bikers Club" :)
 
are you a part of the bicycle racing scene?
Visit www.bangalorebicyclechampionships.com for more details
PICT1945 (Small).JPG
PICT1918 (Small).JPG

Arvind Ganesh

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Oct 2, 2011, 1:28:03 AM10/2/11
to Bangalore Bikers Club
Awesome DIY. Love it. The finished product looks very cool too. 

-Arvind

PICT1945 (Small).JPG
PICT1918 (Small).JPG

George Joseph

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Oct 2, 2011, 1:35:44 AM10/2/11
to Arvind Ganesh, Bangalore Bikers Club
Very impressive Arvind! 

Is the bag permanently attached to the pannier frame?

Again great job!


George Joseph
gjos...@gmail.com
IN cell: 91 94-83-501169
NA cell:1-847-859-9591
PICT1918 (Small).JPG
PICT1945 (Small).JPG

Arvind Ganesh

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Oct 2, 2011, 3:15:19 AM10/2/11
to George Joseph, Bangalore Bikers Club
Looks like it can be taken off when required. I was only commenting myself, the creator is all Parag, the OP :)
PICT1918 (Small).JPG
PICT1945 (Small).JPG

Deepa Mohan

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Oct 2, 2011, 6:46:38 PM10/2/11
to Bangalore Bikers Club
Great going Parag! I am really happy that you finally found the time to share this with us. It's a problem that so many of us face. There's not really been a good solution until now!

And...very wittily written, too!

Cheers, Deepa.

On Sat, Oct 1, 2011 at 9:57 PM, Parag Patankar <parag.p...@gmail.com> wrote:

R. Venkatachalam

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Mar 26, 2013, 6:22:49 AM3/26/13
to bangalor...@googlegroups.com, Bangalore Bikers Club
I saw this recently at the trail race, and it is pretty impressive... Parag says he has ridden through rains... I hope you can mass produce this, for lazy guys like me to just buy from you :D

Sanath Kumar S D

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Mar 26, 2013, 6:53:59 AM3/26/13
to R. Venkatachalam, bangalor...@googlegroups.com
Please refer the attachment. This works for me well.

Regards,

Sanath Kumar S D

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Bike_Back Pack.jpg

Yateesh Kumar

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Mar 26, 2013, 8:12:43 AM3/26/13
to Sanath Kumar S D, R. Venkatachalam, bangalor...@googlegroups.com

Sanath,
Good idea. But that can be told only to the extent of securing ur laptop bag. To the carrier/rack.
The road shocks&  vibrations can impact your laptop&  this will prove detrimental for life of the device over extended time period.
Imho, your laptop is safest only on your back(I mean the backpack you wear on your back).

Some may suggest an option for pannier, but you may also consider the hazard of some motor vehicle hitting it from a side or from behind.

There are very good options in terms of customized laptop back packs & non laptop but multi purpose backpacks which will help you not feel the weight while you are riding. Personally, I would prefer to spend a few hundred more to get a worthy backpack which feels light rather than Sc***ing up on the life of the device.

Btw, I am using Quechua Diosaz 17 raid  Hydration backpack which has a lot of space to carry a 15"laptop along with a set of changeclothes, quickdry towel(decathlon)&  can manage to store a lunch box comfortably on the outer pouch during commute. The pouch is used to store my helmet, saddle bag&  a pair of gloves once I reach office. A very worthy investment so far :)
Just thought this info may help if anyone is considering to buy a new commute backpack.

Happy commuting

Cheers
Yathi  

On 26 Mar 2013 16:24, "Sanath Kumar S D" <sdsana...@gmail.com> wrote:

Please refer the attachment. This works for me well.

Regards,

Sanath Kumar S D


On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 3:52 PM, R. Venkatachalam <r.venka...@gmail.com> wrote:
>

> I saw this...

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Regards,

Sanath
+ 91 988 019 4896

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