I had a few spots of rain and wasn't happy....I'm a pussy...
I had a few spots of rain and wasn't happy....I'm a pussy...
I have used full length mudguards on all my cycles since about 1974. All bikes, from custom racing frames, dutch style, high end mountain bikes, Bromptons. Just about to fit guards to the eBrompton I am working on.It appears then that even with full length mudguards you'll get sprayed.
Your front mudguard is the same as any bike. The faster you go, the higher the spray is from the front wheel. The centrifugal throws the water up from everywhere on the tyre that's in front of the mudguard and above the axle, and you're going forward, so you run into the spray. It's physics so you can't avoid it unless you go very slow.I never get any spray from my mudguards no matter how wet the weather, or how fast I'm going, that's something else Dahon got right with the Helios - it helps that the wheels are small, also the mudguards are close to the tyres so there are no wet heavy spray jets directed at me.
But I need a front mudguard for the Espresso, so far none seem wide and long enough, or fit close enough to the tyre. It's rear mudguard is great, covers a lot of tyre. Vintage mudguards seem better designed for purpose.
I recall a lot of mud being thrown on my clothing from my racing bike in the 80s which had full mudguards (I expect similar from the 26" Espresso), but never from the Helios. I do a lot of riding in the rain, roads nearly always. My bike's magic.Your front mudguard is the same as any bike. The faster you go, the higher the spray is from the front wheel. The centrifugal throws the water up from everywhere on the tyre that's in front of the mudguard and above the axle, and you're going forward, so you run into the spray. It's physics so you can't avoid it unless you go very slow.
Next time you ride in the rain, watch what happens in front of the front mudguard. As your speed increases, you'll see a mane of water in front of the wheel. As you go faster, it rises higher and higher until it sprays you in the face. It's just a matter of speed. Maybe if you don't go too fast, it'll stay low. When you see what it does at what speed, you can decide what to do either to prevent it or to work with it. No need to panic yet.I recall a lot of mud being thrown on my clothing from my racing bike in the 80s which had full mudguards (I expect similar from the 26" Espresso), but never from the Helios. I do a lot of riding in the rain, roads nearly always. My bike's magic.
I might just buy a Zefal front and lengthen it a bit, for the the Espresso.
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I haven't experienced this. Because I have v-brakes, I tend to stay 15.5mph and below in wet weather - when it's dry and I feel up to actually getting some exercise, or if I'm in a hurry, I pedal between 18 and 20mph after assistance cuts off at 15.5mph. I can't keep that up for long with 52T>11T - near nigh impossible for me to do after my very long break from cycling 1991 - 2020, with the Helio's original 53T and no BBS01B.Next time you ride in the rain, watch what happens in front of the front mudguard. As your speed increases, you'll see a mane of water in front of the wheel. As you go faster, it rises higher and higher until it sprays you in the face. It's just a matter of speed. Maybe if you don't go too fast, it'll stay low. When you see what it does at what speed, you can decide what to do either to prevent it or to work with it. No need to panic yet.
I think you're onto something. Maybe his front mudguard can be angled down a bit? I prefer mudguards with stays, for adjustment.Perhaps your front mudguard is set too high off the tyre? As a point on the tyre reaches 12 o'clock it's travelling forward, the water's flung forward and meets the mudguard at 10 past twelve if the mudguard's close or 1 o'clock if it isn't. So if your mudguard stops at 12 o'c but sits way off the tyre you'll enjoy the rising spray from 11 o'c
Soon as they arrive the rain will stop completely.Bloody hell, another tropical storm has just hit...going to order mudguards this evening!
In my last house, I kept my bike in the enclosed porch, so they were essential to give access through to the house. I've moved now and keep the bike in the garage so not as critical as before, but still extremely useful.Mudhuggers fit without stays and have a useful downward-facing lip at the front.
@saneagle how have your stem levers worked out in practice? Have they seen much use, any unforeseen niggles? Are there weaknesses to look out for in some stems? They look OEM!
They do look indispensable like locking brake levers, and ideal on a train. I was fretting about stems being fit-once parts and easily over-torqued, good to know it's withstood good use.When you don't have them, you don't understand how useful they are, but when you have them, it's so easy to turn the bars out of the way, that you find a lot of reasons to use them.