Float vs No Float
#1
Thread Starter
Dude wheres my guads?
Joined: May 2005
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From: Guess
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Float vs No Float
I got a pair of fixed SPD-SLs cleats and I am debating on replacing the float versions... I hate the float I have now but I am not sure what effects it will have on the legs.. Have anybody had problems using fixed cleats?.
-AJ..
-AJ..
#2
Aluminium Crusader :-)

Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 10,050
Likes: 11
From: Melbourne, Australia
I tried fixed cleats once, but it's almost impossible to position them in the right spot -- this is what I found most frustrating.
What don't you like about the float?
With my SPDs, I found them a tiny bit slippery, so I covered the plastic part of the pedal with some gaffer tape -- a bit crude, I know, but sufficient
There's also a reasonable chance you could injure yourself without float.
Many moons ago, most of the old cleats used with toe-clip pedals would wear a small amount which was just enough to provide some float. When the first clipless came in there was no float, and some pros developed injuries. This is why float was first introduced.
What don't you like about the float?
With my SPDs, I found them a tiny bit slippery, so I covered the plastic part of the pedal with some gaffer tape -- a bit crude, I know, but sufficient
There's also a reasonable chance you could injure yourself without float.
Many moons ago, most of the old cleats used with toe-clip pedals would wear a small amount which was just enough to provide some float. When the first clipless came in there was no float, and some pros developed injuries. This is why float was first introduced.
#3
Thread Starter
Dude wheres my guads?
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 2,680
Likes: 0
From: Guess
Bikes: Not enough
Originally Posted by 531Aussie
I tried fixed cleats once, but it's almost impossible to position them in the right spot -- this is what I found most frustrating.
What don't you like about the float?
With my SPDs, I found them a tiny bit slippery, so I covered the plastic part of the pedal with some gaffer tape -- a bit crude, I know, but sufficient
There's also a reasonable chance you could injure yourself without float.
Many moons ago, most of the old cleats used with toe-clip pedals would wear a small amount which was just enough to provide some float. When the first clipless came in there was no float, and some pros developed injuries. This is why float was first introduced.
What don't you like about the float?
With my SPDs, I found them a tiny bit slippery, so I covered the plastic part of the pedal with some gaffer tape -- a bit crude, I know, but sufficient
There's also a reasonable chance you could injure yourself without float.
Many moons ago, most of the old cleats used with toe-clip pedals would wear a small amount which was just enough to provide some float. When the first clipless came in there was no float, and some pros developed injuries. This is why float was first introduced.
#4
Aluminium Crusader :-)

Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 10,050
Likes: 11
From: Melbourne, Australia
i know what you mean by the out of the saddle part. I found my heels slipping sharply inwards at the bottom of each pedal stroke, and this "annoyed" my Achilles', but I think I got used to it.





