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Old 10-15-08, 03:38 PM
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JackD
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Originally Posted by trelhak
The plastic clips won't gouge up your shoes as much, so that's sort of a plus, but they definitely flex more so when you really start hammering, your feet with float all over the pedals.

Good pedals are a fine investment, as they are one of the three points where you actually interface with the bike (the others being the bar and saddle.) If your pedals are crap, the whole bike can feel like crap.

With regard to terminology:
The quill is the 'H'-shaped piece that actually screws into the crankarm.
The cage is the plate or plates that are bolted to either side of the 'H' to create the platform.
The clip is the piece (sold separately) that bolts to the front of the pedal that loops up and over your foot.
The strap is a piece of leather that is threaded through the pedal and the cage and loops around your foot.

The cage gives your foot a place to rest on, the clip keeps the foot from sliding forwards and backwards, the strap ensures that the foot is securely attached to the pedal. Riding with clips but without straps, or the straps overly loose is essentially riding without clips at all.
Ummm...
Since you insist on making definitions you should at least be accurate.

The spindle is what screws into the crank arm.
When I was younger quill pedals were like the MKS road shown above. They have a little quill at the end to retain your foot. Maybe someone has changed the definition since the 70's, but that is what they were called back then. Perhaps you can find some old bike catalogs on ebay to confirm.

Clips don't really prevent your foot from sliding backwards.
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