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Clips, Clipless or Platform?

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Old 08-07-09 | 10:47 AM
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Clips, Clipless or Platform?

What kind of pedals do you like to ride best?

I like clips, and i tighten the straps down nice and snug.
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Old 08-07-09 | 11:02 AM
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Clips are okay if they're wide enough, but on the bikes I ride a lot, I just have plain BMX or platform pedals, the wider the better. Well, the bike I ride the most is a folding bike, and it has folding pedals.

SPD's are indicated on my tandem, because the stoker can make the pedals move unpredictably.

I use Look pedals on my recumbent.
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Old 08-07-09 | 11:08 AM
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Clipless. Sure, rat-traps look cool, but they're a PITA, IMO. I'm just glad Look pedals have been around long enough to be classified as vintage.
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Old 08-07-09 | 11:13 AM
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Depending on the ride, I use them all. Platforms on my cruiser, clips on my commuter (so I can walk some distances and make store stops) and clipless on my distance/recreational bike.
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Old 08-07-09 | 11:15 AM
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All of the above. I have very wide feet, but MKS touring pedals with clips work fine as do the old Lyotard Berthets. I have SPD pedals on several bikes and like them a lot, and one a few bikes I have platform pedals, including BMX pedals on my snow bike. Variety is good.

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Old 08-07-09 | 12:16 PM
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I've got cage pedals on my bike but they were missing the clips when I bought the bike, so essentially just platforms. This works for me, since I use the one bike for everything-utility, commuting, sport/exercise and riding to the bars at night. Nice and simple.

I've been considering powergrips though-- seems like a solid blend of foot retention/power and versatility/ease of use. Clips seem like a hassle for the short rides I do, and clipless are just too expensive (and you can't wear flip flops!)
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Old 08-07-09 | 01:07 PM
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atacs or mks gr-9's with a quality laminated strap or rubber blocks or odyssey triple traps

btw you should never ride a bike in flip flops if you like your toes
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Old 08-07-09 | 01:13 PM
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Clipless, more so once I got some shoes that spread the pressure out more.

Looks for me, because I can use older Shimano clipless, Looks of many varieties, and generics places like nashbar and Performance.

If I had to do it all over again, maybe SPD's so I can wear shoes that are walkable.
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Old 08-07-09 | 02:41 PM
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Clips to flat pedals, straps tightened only just so you can get the foot out in a hurry. That means that for a given set of shoes, the straps are "fixed", eg they don't see any adjustment until wearing another pair of shoes. Gives plenty of uplift potential if there is such a thing as useful uplift (no, I'm not trying to start a debate on that one, it's already been debated from here to kingdom come), and best of all, unvarying foot placement on the pedals.

Last edited by Batman_3000; 08-08-09 at 04:06 AM.
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Old 08-07-09 | 03:38 PM
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I rode clips recently for the first time in about 5 years - on a '72 (and since it's all orig Campy it'll stay that way).

But what was I thinking? Size 12 feet hate clips. Clipless SPD-SLs are on everything else. God it's easier.
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Old 08-07-09 | 03:54 PM
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Clipless, to be specific SPDs with SPD MTB shoes.
Distant second, flats (platform if you prefer that term)
Straps or Clips are not third, they're not on my list. I've tried them and don't find they fit my riding style.
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Old 08-07-09 | 03:56 PM
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I'm with roccobike: SPDs with MTB shoes (but my MTB shoes are very non-aggressive and look like runners). I have quills on one bike without clips (only because the straps rotted away and I haven't replaced them) but still love to ride clipless....

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Old 08-07-09 | 03:59 PM
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Depends on what I use the bike for...

Panasonic PT3500 and Bottecchia Special - commuting: MKS Touring
Peugeot UO8 - cross and Marin MTB: Time MTB clipless
Bottecchia Giro d'Italia and Professional, Bianchi Veloce and Pista - road: Look clipless
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Old 08-07-09 | 04:01 PM
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Rat traps, no straps
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Old 08-07-09 | 04:44 PM
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I use toeclips on everything. Campy Record SL, C-Record platform pedals, Shimano 600 Platform pedals, Chorus platforms. Also a few miscellaneous MKS and Lyotard quill-type pedals. I set the straps just tight enough that they touch my shoes. It holds my foot in position, but never impedes foot extraction.
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Old 08-07-09 | 05:00 PM
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I use both toe clips (with slotted cleats) and Look clipless pedals on my bikes.
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Old 08-07-09 | 05:21 PM
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Originally Posted by markk900
I'm with roccobike: SPDs with MTB shoes (but my MTB shoes are very non-aggressive and look like runners)....

Mark
Me too.
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Old 08-07-09 | 05:39 PM
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Originally Posted by Kommisar89
Depends on what I use the bike for...
Same here. I'll use clipless for most everything, and for more leisurely riding, I use toe clips & straps.
The clipless I use are the older Dura Ace SPD-R
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Old 08-07-09 | 06:06 PM
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I use Ultegra SPD pedals with Shimano mountain bike shoes. I like them because I can walk in them without looking too weird. On a couple of my bikes, I have "campus" pedals, which are SPD on one side and platform on the other (these are on the bikes I use for errands around the neighborhood wearing street shoes).

Today it was warm and I rode the Waterford through Golden Gate Park to the Beach Chalet for lunch wearing Shimano SH-SD60B SPD sandals.

I'm a late bloomer when it comes to clipless; I really started regularly using clipless about a year ago.
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Old 08-07-09 | 06:44 PM
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I too tend to be a very late adopter of new technology. I was using toe clips until only this year. Finally tried a set of Shimano Ultegra SPD's with Specialized carbon shoes and wow what a difference! Just so much more comfortable and easy to deal with, especially when clipping in on my single speed bike. Now three of my four bikes have SPD's. I keep my grocery getter/beater single speed bike with toe clips so I can wear street shoes when doing errands.

I'd like to try some mountain bike shoes or some that would allow me to walk around easily. Do they make these for SPD's or do I need mountain bike specific pedals/cleats?
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Old 08-07-09 | 07:01 PM
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I love clips and straps. I love the way they cut off the circulation in my feet. I adore the way you have to remember to loosen them when you come back into town and hit that first stop sign or traffic light that you simply have to stop at. I delight in falling over when I have forgotten to loosen them at that stop sign or traffic light and entertaining the hoi polloi. I go all a-dither over the *** shoe laces that inevitably came with them (I replaced them with regular white athletic shoe laces - may not have been proper Euro-styling, but they worked a lot better and lasted a lot longer). I went ga-ga over trying to nail on cleats and watching the wimpy little "nails" bend as the hit the steel shank in the shoe. (A nearby lbs solved that problem by riveting the cleats into place - worked great.)


If you have read this far, you understand why I have SPDs on everything I own (all road bikes) with MTB shoes so I can walk without looking like a duck or slipping and my butt in a store. I'd only be angry if my click-shifting disappeared. I'd be homicidal if clipless pedals and shoes disappeared.
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Old 08-07-09 | 07:06 PM
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Originally Posted by palladio
I'd like to try some mountain bike shoes or some that would allow me to walk around easily. Do they make these for SPD's or do I need mountain bike specific pedals/cleats?
Depends on what the meaning of "is" is.

Okay, it's not quite that bad. There are "regular" SPD's and a couple of variations. SPD-R is one, and I think there may be one or two others that have some distinctive name. Any "regular" SPD cleat will work in any "regular" SPD pedal, regardless of whether one or both is marketed as "road" or "mountain" or "fitness" or "causal" or whatever.
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Old 08-07-09 | 07:06 PM
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Originally Posted by Batman_3000
Clips to flat pedals, straps tightened only just so you can get the foot out in a hurry. That means that for a given set of shoes, the straps are "fixed", eg they don't see any adjustment until wearing another pair of shoes. Gives plenty of uplift potential if there is such a thing as useful (no, I'm not trying to start a debate on that one, it's already been debated from here to kingdom come), and best of all, unvarying foot placement on the pedals.
That's how I do it when I use clips - on the fixed gear and a couple of my older bikes. Platforms on the three speed and the unicycle. I use LOOKs on one (the bike was painted to match the color of the pedals ) and SPDs on a couple others.
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Old 08-07-09 | 07:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Road Fan
I use toeclips on everything. Campy Record SL, C-Record platform pedals, Shimano 600 Platform pedals, Chorus platforms. Also a few miscellaneous MKS and Lyotard quill-type pedals. I set the straps just tight enough that they touch my shoes. It holds my foot in position, but never impedes foot extraction.
Kindred spirit!

Road quills w/ toeclips and color-coordinated straps on all 4 road bikes, square MTB pedals w/ plastic toeclips on the mountain bike.
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Old 08-07-09 | 07:43 PM
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Lyotard 36's on almost everything, sadly they are becoming harder to get. racing type quill pedals are simply too narrow for my feet. Can only use them on short rides.

I'll probably start buying MKS touring pedals soon.
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