On Tue, 2012-09-25 at 15:56 -0700, Rex Kerr wrote:
> Starting up again after a stop! I've become accustomed to just
> stopping with my feet in whatever position I want. I put my weight on
> the dominant leg as I lower myself off the saddle and put my other
> foot on the ground to finally stop. Problem is, now I'm in a bad
> position to restart. If the light changes quickly I'm unprepared.
> With clipless I'd just lift my foot and the crank would follow my foot
> and be in a good position. Not so easy with platforms. I guess I
> could train myself to lower the other foot on stops, but that seems
> awkward too, not to mention that the crank ends up at TDC, which isn't
> right either.
Give it a little nudge, almost a kick, and it will come around. It may
bump to a stop on your leg. However: don't be too enthusiastic, don't
use too much force, especially with "beartrap" pedals.
And definitely not with beartrap pedals you have, without noticing it,
been honing the teeth every time you make a 180 degree right turn and
every so slightly ground the pedal, the way I did every day for almost
10 years on my commute.
So one day, after ten years of patient, if unknowning honing, I gave
that pedal a mighty kick rather than a gentle nudge, and the pedal came
around with considerable force and BAM! dug those sharpened teeth right
into my leg. I then moved my leg, and the teeth raked down my shin.
That was in 1995. I still have the scars.