goo_mason
Champion barbed-wire hurdler
- Location
- Leith, Edinburgh
jimboalee said:![]()
There it is. Wilkinsons car mat. Pop rivets.
jimboalee - our very own Professor Branestawm !!

jimboalee said:![]()
There it is. Wilkinsons car mat. Pop rivets.
jimboalee said:Some of you may have seen the photo of my front mudflap, the one that hangs down to the tarmac and is three inches wide.
Last night it rained. My commute is along country B roads and through Warwick town centre. I DO NOT like being splashed with muddy, cow shitty puddle water, or oily, diesely puddle water in town. So in addition to the long mudflap, I strategically place a piece of electrical insulation tape on the FRONT of my front mudguard.
I set it to point down to almost touch the tyre. It stops the cow shitty spray catching the breeze and landing on my leggings and flouro jacket. For town cyclists, it reduces the number of grey blots on the front of flouro jackets. Simple, very cheap but remarkably effective clothes saver.
CotterPin said:I know I am about to get shot down in flames (and possibly be accused of being Bonj's disciple), however I am not totally convinced whether a following cyclist gains much benefit from a bicycle with regular mudguards to one with no guards at all.
This is based upon my observations from a very damp club ride last Sunday. We had a mix of no guards, race blades, regular guards and (one person) guards with a mudflap.
The only person who I could cycle behind and not get muddy was the guy with the mudflaps. I did not notice any appreciable difference cycling behind any of the other cyclists. Mudguards may protect the rider of that machine but I am not 100% convinced that they do as much to protect following cyclists as some fondly believe they do, unless you are using full length mudflaps.