How cold do you go?
#51
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2016
Location: South Carolina Upstate
Posts: 2,084
Bikes: 2010 Fuji Absolute 3.0 1994 Trek 850
Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 755 Post(s)
Liked 543 Times
in
312 Posts
depends on how long I have not ridden...over a week and I'm going regardless
plus I live in SC, so
plus I live in SC, so
#52
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Highlands Ranch, CO
Posts: 1,221
Bikes: '13 Diamondback Hybrid Commuter, '17 Spec Roubaix Di2, '17 Spec Camber 29'er, '19 CDale Topstone Gravel
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 590 Post(s)
Liked 444 Times
in
260 Posts
Another year round commuter here, where my coldest 30 minute commute was 5 F (-15 C). And my coldest Imperial Century (for fun they said???) was on New Years Day in 2018 with the local Rocky Mountain Rando club, where the start was at 12 F, was below 20 F for the first 50 miles, and never went above 27 F for the final 50 miles. That one was a character builder: https://www.strava.com/activities/1336643971
Nowadays, with all those hardcore shenanigans out of my system, ~25 F (in full sun) is my lower limit for a ride of any duration. Any colder than that requires a base layer under the winter bibpants, which makes the riding less than comfortable, due to heat/sweat buildup.
Nowadays, with all those hardcore shenanigans out of my system, ~25 F (in full sun) is my lower limit for a ride of any duration. Any colder than that requires a base layer under the winter bibpants, which makes the riding less than comfortable, due to heat/sweat buildup.
Last edited by Riveting; 01-25-21 at 02:23 PM.
#53
Senior Member
As a year round commuter, I feel pretty comfortable down to -10°C, for 1-1.5 hr long rides. I have ridden a couple times at -20°C, but at that point some special gear becomes necessary, which I don't have (some kind of face cover, thick hat, cold toes and fingers also become a problem). My cut-off t° for commuting has become -15°C, and -10°C for recreational/fitness rides. Longest rides I've done at couple degrees below freezing have been in the 60-65 km range, the latest 2 weeks ago. Had to get off the bike and walk for a bit twice to keep my toes from going numb, otherwise it was fine.
#54
Rhapsodic Laviathan
Here, here, this man speaks the truthest of truths. As long as I have a car, a bike doesn't exist in the winter time. Hell... my bikes don't wanna be out there either.
Likes For Jax Rhapsody:
#55
Newbie
It was 2 degrees F when I rode my fat bike this morning. I do wonder how cold it has to get to affect bike components/ frame, etc. -- Good riding.
Likes For pdlamb:
#58
Full Member
Join Date: Sep 2020
Location: Scotland
Posts: 464
Bikes: Way too many
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 712 Post(s)
Liked 525 Times
in
310 Posts
I work from home so don't commute and all cycling is leisure/fitness, so I won't go out if there's any ice (so maybe 4oC). Rain and light wind is fine, I've got warm clothes, I just don't enjoy falling off. I've got a turbo trainer set up for when it's too nasty to go outside.
#60
Senior Member
Regarding the toughness of materials, steel does become brittle at lower temperatures, but it varies a lot depending on carbon content and alloying elements such as nickel, chrome and others. Cheap hi-ten steel can become brittle at temps as high as -30°C, but other types of steel can lower that quite a lot. Aluminum doesn't become brittle in lower temps due to a different crystalline structure.
So you should be fine on aluminum bike, but jumps could destroy steel parts at extreme temps.
Likes For subgrade:
#62
Newbie
Join Date: Jan 2021
Posts: 3
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 1 Time
in
1 Post
The temperature does not matter too much for me, as I will still commute in it. The only issue I run into when commuting when it is cold is finding a balance between staying warm and wearing too much and getting too hot.
Likes For green3ac:
#64
Newbie
25F seems to be my limit for a 60-90 min road ride in Fairfield CT. I'm already wearing 2 pairs of gloves, so any colder then my finger tips go numb, making it difficult to work my brakes and STI shifters.
#65
Newbie
Join Date: Jan 2021
Posts: 3
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 1 Time
in
1 Post
For those of you who do go out in freezing (or below freezing) temperatures, what gear have you found to be especially helpful for keeping warm (without having to stop and take layers off)?
#66
Sr Member on Sr bikes
Rode 17 miles today at 20*F, windchill 17*F. Stout 12-16mph wind directly out of the north.
Dan
Dan
#67
Dead but dreaming
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Bay Area, CA (East Bay - Contra Costa County)
Posts: 374
Bikes: 2020 Santa Cruz Stigmata, 2022 Cannondale Synapse
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 146 Post(s)
Liked 295 Times
in
163 Posts
40 degrees F would be my limit. I'm a California guy.
Rode today and it dipped down to about 45 degrees F. I was wearing a full length warm underlayer, thermal jersey, thermal bib tights, thermal socks, windproof full fingered glove, cycling cap under my helmet. It was chilly the whole ride but mostly rolling hills today and not a ton of climbing (1,500 ft).
Rode today and it dipped down to about 45 degrees F. I was wearing a full length warm underlayer, thermal jersey, thermal bib tights, thermal socks, windproof full fingered glove, cycling cap under my helmet. It was chilly the whole ride but mostly rolling hills today and not a ton of climbing (1,500 ft).
#68
Senior Member
Mountain biking I'll do into the teens F. The speeds are low and the effort is high so it isn't hard to say warm. Road biking on the other hand I really don't like doing bellow 60F. Windchill sucks and there is no winning. You either ease up so you get less windchill but freeze because you aren't working hard or work hard by going faster and freeze because of the increase in windchill. Road bike stays on the trainer in the winter, maybe I'll do some gravel rides when the temps bump up over 45F otherwise it is all mtn biking if I go outside.
#69
On Your Left
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Long Island, New York, USA
Posts: 8,373
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
Mentioned: 34 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3004 Post(s)
Liked 2,432 Times
in
1,186 Posts
Started out at 20*F and ended at a balmy 26*F



Last edited by GlennR; 01-30-21 at 05:43 PM.
#70
Newbie
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: St Albert, Alberta
Posts: 4
Bikes: MEC Aspire, 2014 Ridley Orion C10
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Canadian Winter Riding
Hi from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada,
My lower limit is -35 (-31 in American) which includes wind chill. Thankfully the altitude of my location means a low humidity winter with little snowfall but lots of cold. My ride is set up with 700 C tires because the snow fall is typically low here. Key equipment: gloves/trigger mitts/Bar Mitt poggies and winter riding footwear that allows me to clip into my pedals. Facial frostbite is still a risk, just can't seem to prevent my goggles from fogging up over the hour it takes me to commute to work: am open to suggestions.
My lower limit is -35 (-31 in American) which includes wind chill. Thankfully the altitude of my location means a low humidity winter with little snowfall but lots of cold. My ride is set up with 700 C tires because the snow fall is typically low here. Key equipment: gloves/trigger mitts/Bar Mitt poggies and winter riding footwear that allows me to clip into my pedals. Facial frostbite is still a risk, just can't seem to prevent my goggles from fogging up over the hour it takes me to commute to work: am open to suggestions.
#71
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: Walnut Creek, CA
Posts: 698
Bikes: 1969 Peugeot PX10, 1992 Della Santa, Linus Roadster 8, Biria 700C ST-8
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 686 Post(s)
Liked 442 Times
in
271 Posts
35F would be my minimum. But really if I look out the window and check my phone. I will lay in bed until at least 40F. I mean what’s the big hurry? If the sun is coming up and I’m retired and the kids are all doing what they do, I’m happy to roll over and snuggle in for a while.
#72
Full Member
humidity. waterproofing.
20 degrees ain't bad if the humidity is low.
if my feet are sopped from rain and it is 42 degrees like today, then i am coming in after two hours.
you do get a good workout when your kit is soaked with 20 pounds of rain and sweat, now i know why the pros just wear shorts in the rain.
if you want to be like Hinault and ride til you do permanent nerve damage to you hands then i respect that, and i will watch you do that on the TV while sipping some hot chocolate,
one thing for sure, never trust the weather forecast, doppler radar or even looking out the window because you could get zapped, and it always happens when your the furthest from home.
having to change a flat when it is freezing scares the crap out of me, so the further i get from home, the faster i ride so i can get back to within walking distance because i know that the tire levers will be useless with frozen fingers, and i do not want to quit exercising if it is cold and i am soaking wet. coordination seems to drop off when i am cold which explains all the stumbling and bumbling i experience while trying to get all that crap off when i get home.
20 degrees ain't bad if the humidity is low.
if my feet are sopped from rain and it is 42 degrees like today, then i am coming in after two hours.
you do get a good workout when your kit is soaked with 20 pounds of rain and sweat, now i know why the pros just wear shorts in the rain.
if you want to be like Hinault and ride til you do permanent nerve damage to you hands then i respect that, and i will watch you do that on the TV while sipping some hot chocolate,
one thing for sure, never trust the weather forecast, doppler radar or even looking out the window because you could get zapped, and it always happens when your the furthest from home.
having to change a flat when it is freezing scares the crap out of me, so the further i get from home, the faster i ride so i can get back to within walking distance because i know that the tire levers will be useless with frozen fingers, and i do not want to quit exercising if it is cold and i am soaking wet. coordination seems to drop off when i am cold which explains all the stumbling and bumbling i experience while trying to get all that crap off when i get home.
Last edited by cjenrick; 01-31-21 at 07:16 PM.
#73
Newbie
#74
On Your Left
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Long Island, New York, USA
Posts: 8,373
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
Mentioned: 34 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3004 Post(s)
Liked 2,432 Times
in
1,186 Posts
With wind chill it was around 9*F.
BTW... today we got 13" and counting of snow.