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Clipless Pedals

Old 12-28-06 | 09:17 AM
  #26  
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found the 540's for about $50 from blue sky cycling, been a great pedal, I run the multi release cleat, very easy out.
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Old 12-28-06 | 01:12 PM
  #27  
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first post. but not a newbie- been road racing and road riding for quite some time now... but never put clipless pedals on my mountain bike- until now.

my first question is probably a stupid one- as i'm really not familiar with the offroad world. does/did LOOK ever make an offroad pedal? i ask only because it would be nice to keep the same system on all my bikes and ive ridden with LOOKs since the very early 90s...

second- when looking at Crank Bros. or Shimano- will most all offroad shoes accomodate either choice?


thanks in advance for informative replies.
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Old 12-28-06 | 01:55 PM
  #28  
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Originally Posted by sleazy
first post. but not a newbie- been road racing and road riding for quite some time now... but never put clipless pedals on my mountain bike- until now.

my first question is probably a stupid one- as i'm really not familiar with the offroad world. does/did LOOK ever make an offroad pedal? i ask only because it would be nice to keep the same system on all my bikes and ive ridden with LOOKs since the very early 90s...

second- when looking at Crank Bros. or Shimano- will most all offroad shoes accomodate either choice?


thanks in advance for informative replies.
Look doesn't list any mountain bike pedals in their catalog. Their system uses a much larger cleat then the SPD or Crank Bros. which would not be good for off-road use. You will end up walking more off-road and you don't want a large slippery cleat under your foot when you go off-road.

Most all of the pedal/shoe combinations for off-road are compatible. You might have to do some minor surgery on the shoe to get it to fit properly but it's usually not much of a problem. Just be sure to get a mountain bike shoe with a good agressive sole on it. 'Cause as bad as a large slippery cleat is off-road, a large slippery shoe is even worse
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Old 12-29-06 | 08:03 PM
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A friend of mine just gave me these. I love em. The cage around them helps me locate my cleat without looking.

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Old 12-29-06 | 10:53 PM
  #30  
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heavyyyyy
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Old 12-30-06 | 12:47 AM
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Razor blades.

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Repeat.
I dont get it
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Old 12-30-06 | 12:49 AM
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Originally Posted by wheelhot
heavyyyyy

They're on a bike that already weighs 29lbs.

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Old 12-30-06 | 06:11 AM
  #33  
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oh I see, oh well
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Old 12-30-06 | 12:26 PM
  #34  
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Originally Posted by Lovin
A friend of mine just gave me these. I love em. The cage around them helps me locate my cleat without looking.

I used the very similar 545's as my first pair of clipless's back in the day. The learning curve is a bit faster because you can buy yourself time finding the entry point while still moving on technical terrain. After a while I really started preferring the simplicity of the 540's and could get into them almost 100% of the time. I mostly XC and singletrack - no DH racing.

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Old 12-30-06 | 12:28 PM
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ive always used the time clipless i love them

Last edited by Killerbee; 12-30-06 at 12:54 PM.
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Old 12-30-06 | 02:38 PM
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Originally Posted by probable556
I used the very similar 545's as my first pair of clipless's back in the day. The learning curve is a bit faster because you can buy yourself time finding the entry point while still moving on technical terrain. After a while I really started preferring the simplicity of the 540's and could get into them almost 100% of the time. I mostly XC and singletrack - no DH racing.

Yeah, my bike came with 505's and I'd been riding on those for 3 months before I put those on. It wasn't always a big deal, but when you're exhausted trying to click in after losing some momentum on a monster climb, the cages help.
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Old 01-02-07 | 01:12 PM
  #37  
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https://www.nashbar.com/profile.cfm?c...pless%20Pedals

Nashbar pedals have been good to me. cheap, light, SPD compatible and 20 bucks.
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Old 01-02-07 | 02:38 PM
  #38  
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I like my CB Candy pedals.... cheap and work very well. A huge improvement from SPDs if you ask me.
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Old 01-02-07 | 09:05 PM
  #39  
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If you are on a budget I strongly suggest Wellgo pedals. Work as good and sometimes better than Shimano and are a tad cheaper.

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Old 01-03-07 | 10:33 AM
  #40  
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Originally Posted by Lovin
A friend of mine just gave me these. I love em. The cage around them helps me locate my cleat without looking.

I had these cleats for a couple of months and the plastic cage broke when my foot hit a rock. I just use the Shimano M-520 SPD now, which work okay.
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Old 01-05-07 | 12:32 PM
  #41  
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okeedokee...

got my shoes and stole the 520s off my kids road bike and set out. everything is as it should be- but ive got a question for the more experienced mountain bikers out there...

spring tension. do you run it light so can put a foot down quickly? or tune it tight to keep your feet from unclipping through the rough stuff.

and dont say- "somewhere in the middle" as that's obvious. i'm looking for which of the two options most of you lean towards.

thanks in advance
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