It was pretty impressive and put me at ease a bit. Im probably a bit unique - and definitely vain - because i use fenders on my rivs more for the protection of the bike than myself. I use the plastic sks ones, precisely because they are expendable /disposable.
Holefully i or someone can find that photo
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<IMG_8076.JPG>
Andy Cheatham
Pittsburgh
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I'm curious about others' thoughts about fenders and knobbies. Fenders are most useful with knobbies, given that you ride knobbies in dirty conditions, and because the knobs pick up dirt. But I too would certainly hesitate more with this combination.Do some of y'all use fenders with knobby tires? Your safeguards? Your reasons?Me, I've used fenders off road for a long while, but I've also run low-tread tires off road for a long time -- Big Apples and, currently, Furious Freds, which have tiny little knoblets not likely to pick up a stick. I would have installed regular, strutted fenders on my erstwhile Santa Cruz Bontrager Race Lite, with 2.3" Maxxis Ikons, if the frame easily took fenders, but it didn't and, rather than hack it, I installed a long motocross-type fender in front (held on by a plug in the steerer; no struts), and a shortie clip on in the back, both supplemented by plastic bits zip tied to seat tube and down tube (pretty effective, if I do say so myself, but ugly).I suppose I'd be inclined to use regular fenders, say Planet Bike Cacadias, with knobbies if I had at least 2 cm of air under them, and if I could attach the front struts halfway up the fork.FWIW, I do use Cascadias with the F Freds on the Matthews, with the front struts bolted way high up on the inside top lowrider bosses. Not too much triangulation there, but while the front fender does sway a bit, it doesn't rattle. (And, because the Matthews has bigly TCO, I am always kicking this fender; it gets up, shakes its head, and keeps on going.) The rear is a shorty because I hate bashing rear fenders against things.
On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 1:15 PM, Stuart Lovinggood <slovi...@gmail.com> wrote:
I want to like fenders, I really do. I know they're practical and all. But I also really want to run knobbies from time to time. And even though I have slicks on my Joe, they are 53mm wide and the 65mm wide fenders are just a lot to contend with. And so far these fenders have done a lot to distract from riding, with all the swaying and rattling and spooky noises. Maybe if I end up getting a bike with narrower tires that I'm less likely to ride off into the woods on, I'll get a nice set of metal fenders and have them tuned up by a fender whisperer.
On Friday, May 26, 2017 at 7:11:18 AM UTC-5, Ron Mc wrote:
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Deacon and Jeff: thanks for the knobbies + fenders perspective. Reason for asking, one day I may swap the hardly-knobs F Freds for something more knobby, particularly as the Thunderburts are said to outroll even the F Freds.
Question, Patrick: the Thunderburt knobs are hardly bigger than those on the F Freds. Still: are the knobs too big for comfort and fenders together? I suppose that by the time you are at the Racing Ralph or R&R size-knob, you are clearly at more risk.
Jeff: I have to say that, from my experience with downpours that, in well under an hour, dump enough rain to flood my access road a good 6" above the 12" high bb of the Diamond Back mtb fixie I was riding, fenders still help to keep my saddle and backside dry. We get a citywide average of 8-9"/year, ranging from 14" or so at the Sandia foothills to 5" or so in some parts of the west mesa. Real gutters and drains are rare; most streets are themselves gutters, feeding runoff to a system of engineered arroyos; so that you often find yourself riding through a temporary river as runoff is shunted toward the curbs where cyclists ride.
And, please post ride experience and photos of the new Space Horse. I am very, very chuffed at the so-large and ever growing "road bike for dirt" segment, and from the All City site, this seems to be a particularly elegant example, with a particularly elegant fork. (Me, I need fatter tires than 42s for our sandy conditions, whence the TCO compromise with the Matthews for 60s + fenders capability.)
I'm curious about others' thoughts about fenders and knobbies. Fenders are most useful with knobbies, given that you ride knobbies in dirty conditions, and because the knobs pick up dirt. But I too would certainly hesitate more with this combination.Do some of y'all use fenders with knobby tires? Your safeguards? Your reasons?Me, I've used fenders off road for a long while, but I've also run low-tread tires off road for a long time -- Big Apples and, currently, Furious Freds, which have tiny little knoblets not likely to pick up a stick. I would have installed regular, strutted fenders on my erstwhile Santa Cruz Bontrager Race Lite, with 2.3" Maxxis Ikons, if the frame easily took fenders, but it didn't and, rather than hack it, I installed a long motocross-type fender in front (held on by a plug in the steerer; no struts), and a shortie clip on in the back, both supplemented by plastic bits zip tied to seat tube and down tube (pretty effective, if I do say so myself, but ugly).I suppose I'd be inclined to use regular fenders, say Planet Bike Cacadias, with knobbies if I had at least 2 cm of air under them, and if I could attach the front struts halfway up the fork.FWIW, I do use Cascadias with the F Freds on the Matthews, with the front struts bolted way high up on the inside top lowrider bosses. Not too much triangulation there, but while the front fender does sway a bit, it doesn't rattle. (And, because the Matthews has bigly TCO, I am always kicking this fender; it gets up, shakes its head, and keeps on going.) The rear is a shorty because I hate bashing rear fenders against things.
On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 1:15 PM, Stuart Lovinggood <slovi...@gmail.com> wrote:
I want to like fenders, I really do. I know they're practical and all. But I also really want to run knobbies from time to time. And even though I have slicks on my Joe, they are 53mm wide and the 65mm wide fenders are just a lot to contend with. And so far these fenders have done a lot to distract from riding, with all the swaying and rattling and spooky noises. Maybe if I end up getting a bike with narrower tires that I'm less likely to ride off into the woods on, I'll get a nice set of metal fenders and have them tuned up by a fender whisperer.
On Friday, May 26, 2017 at 7:11:18 AM UTC-5, Ron Mc wrote:
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Now that one looks like it has a suspended rear. I was wondering
how they managed to suspend the rear wheel on that other one...
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I wanted to run semi knobbies on the Atlantis for the C&O canal so came up with this ugly setup. The front is a stay-less MTB fender that at least keeps the spray off the water bottles, headset, and out of your face (but not your shoes or the drivetrain). The rear has lots of clearance but that was because I had been experimenting with tires and didn't want to readjust the fender line each time. This helped alot to keep the trail grime off me and the bike. The CnO stays wet days after it rains. The front flops around but doesn't touch the tire and seems not to catch sticks.
-Dave J
On roads, metal fenders, reasonable clearance, and slicks? Lightning will strike first. Knobbies, rocky single-track, plastic fenders, tight trails in the woods? Buy spares.
My Wednesday Night Lights bike goes through two Honjos a year because I set my 650b machine up for gravel road travel/commuting and take it Hucking/ mountain biking at night after work. If I were better at manualing a bike over unexpected drops it would be no problem.
No trouble with sticks etc., but I kill front fenders on drop-offs. My rear light wiring got sheared off last week. It is time to pound out the fenders and run a new wire.
As a point of comparison, my RH, with 40k plus miles on the road, is on its original front fender....
When I still used SKS fenders, I blew through a couple of fronts a year just knocking around on the road, and got knocked down a couple of times. Metal fenders, properly mounted, are a vig step up in both reliability and efficiency. They are also ordinarily about 200g lighter than the same width chromoplaatics. Honjos or Berthoud are both pretty challenging to mount to Rivendells with horizontal dropouts, as Grant didn't set his bridges carefully..
Best,
Will
William M deRosset
Fort Collins CO
I have been using fenders now for a few years on my Rivbikes, but I get nervous sometimes. Where I live it rains pretty often and lotsa sticks on the shoulders.I have heard about the stick jamming effects that can happen, and sometimes I wonder if using fenders is worth the risk.
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Andy Cheatham
Pittsburgh
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Dear Ron,I was just speaking to someone about squirrels while driving and how that person tries to avoid hitting them but she mentioned that they always seem to run across the street, at the last minute.
On Mon, May 29, 2017 at 9:06 AM, Ron Mc <bulld...@gmail.com> wrote:
squirrels are more frightening than charging deer, because they try twice to run through your spokes.A buddy was laughing me on a wooded greenway for ringing my bike bell at squirrels.
On Monday, May 29, 2017 at 7:54:16 AM UTC-5, Lee Legrand wrote:Dear John,Did a squirrel get stuck within the wheel while riding, causing the crack in the fork?
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Dear Ron,I was just speaking to someone about squirrels while driving and how that person tries to avoid hitting them but she mentioned that they always seem to run across the street, at the last minute.
On Mon, May 29, 2017 at 9:06 AM, Ron Mc <bulld...@gmail.com> wrote:
squirrels are more frightening than charging deer, because they try twice to run through your spokes.A buddy was laughing me on a wooded greenway for ringing my bike bell at squirrels.
On Monday, May 29, 2017 at 7:54:16 AM UTC-5, Lee Legrand wrote:Dear John,Did a squirrel get stuck within the wheel while riding, causing the crack in the fork?
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Bill in Westchester, NY
I have been using fenders now for a few years on my Rivbikes, but I get nervous sometimes. Where I live it rains pretty often and lotsa sticks on the shoulders.I have heard about the stick jamming effects that can happen, and sometimes I wonder if using fenders is worth the risk.