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New Fenders
My old fenders (for my commuter bike) snapped in half today when I clipped the door at work. Ouch! What I would like to do is buy a set of metal fenders:crash:. (Because metal last longer than plastic.) Which brands are the best and why?
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Originally Posted by Colorado Kid
(Post 19132026)
My old fenders (for my commuter bike) snapped in half today when I clipped the door at work. Ouch! What I would like to do is buy a set of metal fenders:crash:. (Because metal last longer than plastic.) Which brands are the best and why?
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If metal, then yes, Velo Orange.
I would not assume metal will last longer than plastic-- it depends on the metal, the plastic, and {most of all) on installation. In my experience fenders last until something gets caught in the spokes, which can happen at any time. |
I've had the Velo Orange hammered aluminum; loved the look but mounting was frustrating and toe overlap was a real problem on my FG. They didn't break, I gave up.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/PH...=w1024-h768-no Planet Bike Hardcore worked fine, easy to install, polycarbonate... stolen along with the rest of my bike. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/IR...=w1268-h951-no SKS Long boards now for two years. Polycarbonate also, excellent fenders. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/vu...CeLJJs=s640-no Anything that breaks polycarbonate fenders would likely break aluminum ones too. I don't think the polycarbonate ones are subject to the kind of embrittlement that OP might be worried about... it just doesn't happen. |
I've had excellent performance from my gilles Berthoud stainless steel fenders for the last 8+ years.
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CAT in Eugene is now making custom fenders. I think Aluminum.
I don't know if they ship. http://www.catoregon.org/ I don't see them listed on their website, but I know they make them. I have one vintage bike that I was going to outfit with fenders, so I have some taken off of an old (free) Raleigh frame. They'll take some work, but they should clean up nicely. Anyway, it never hurts to look at used/vingage. |
I've read reports from a few people that thin aluminum fenders didn't last long, but as [MENTION=73614]rhm[/MENTION] points out, most (or perhaps all) of these failures are from mishaps.
SKS chromoplastic™ fenders are a plastic/aluminum composite and are worth considering. The claim is that they combine the good attributes of both materials. I've been using a set for about three years, and they're holding up fine. Another idea is Wald chrome-plated steel fenders. They weigh more but will probably withstand more bending than others. They look pretty nice except for the struts, which appear to be galvanized. |
FWIW: I've had the same Zefal plastic fenders on my city beater for 25+ years. Parts of the hardware have salt rusted off & been replaced but the plastic still looks great.
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Another idea is custom wood fenders. There are a few companies out there. Spendy, maybe heavy, but beautiful!
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Originally Posted by noglider
(Post 19133915)
I've read reports from a few people that thin aluminum fenders didn't last long, but as [MENTION=73614]rhm[/MENTION] points out, most (or perhaps all) of these failures are from mishaps.
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i have not had luck with either sks raceblades or honjo aluminum fenders. they both broke in less than a year's time.
a coworker has planet bike fenders and he says he likes them as they're durable. however the front one came off and he hasn't been able to replace it. so those 3 are off my list. i will probably want to see fenders in person before purchasing but i have a feeling any fender i get will yield these results. getting fenders to stay on and not break has been a real issue for me. |
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