subaqua
What’s the point
- Location
- Leytonstone
its the wind chill for me, and then the 1 mile walk across the olympic park. cool down a bit tooo much on the walk, a;lthough if its going to be -7 a thicker outer layer should work well
Has the weather significantly changed in the last couple of years, or are all you people being hyper-cautious?
This is what happened to me when I carried on commuting into the frosty early mornings of winter - luckily my helmet took the main impact - my teeth, lips, cheek and rest of my face had only a secondary blow!!!!!
I now limit myself to 5 degrees or above.
The bike was absolutely fine - not a scratch. Shame the same couldn't be said for my teeth!!!!!!
[attachment=1549:Accident.jpg][attachment=1549:Accident.jpg]
About to restart the commute after more than a year off owing to being at a different client where cycling wasn't an option. I didn't ride through the winter last year - stopped in October, coincidentally, and didn't the previous winter. Before that I cycled every winter on standard 23 or 25s on a generic road bike. That was in the 1990s.
My ride isn't bad - 4 miles to the railway station, then from Waterloo to various places in London. I tend to ride my fixed-wheel bike in the winter - less to go wrong, and a combination of carbon and cheap components means it's less vulnerable to the salt than my custom-built audax (105/Ultegra).
If I don't cycle, I need to get my partner to drive me to the station, which means a very early start for her, plus the inconvenience of having to collect me, and 16 miles a day extra car usage - very ineffecient and not very environmentally friendly.
Not so bothered about the cold - I have the right gear, and though I've never come off before, as I get older, and given that as a consultant a day off means no money in the bank, I'm getting more paranoid
So whatever I can do to reduce risk I'm up for... definitely considering studded tyres. Question - do you think it's safer or more dangerous to ride fixed? I could enable the freewheel...
S.
also lost the the clip-less pedals and gone back to normals for now.
Was going to ask about that too - on my fixed-wheel bike I have double-sided SPDs. Am wondering if traditional toe-clips would be safer if one needed to get one's feet out more quickly...
S.
Was going to ask about that too - on my fixed-wheel bike I have double-sided SPDs. Am wondering if traditional toe-clips would be safer if one needed to get one's feet out more quickly...
S.
its personal i guess, but i just feel safer when im not locked in. and if you do have to put a foot down, look cleats dont exactly give good grip at the best of times![]()
its personal i guess, but i just feel safer when im not locked in. and if you do have to put a foot down, look cleats dont exactly give good grip at the best of times![]()