Armed Polite Society
Main Forums => The Roundtable => Topic started by: charby on April 15, 2014, 01:44:43 PM
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So against my better judgment I'm going to start riding my bike to work a few times a week. I did this several years ago and about got killed by a person backing out a driveway at a high rate of speed, so I have driven to work ever since then. I've scouted out a little safer route to work that is .5 mile further and once the weather stabilizes I'll start riding.
I have a Trek MTB that I have converted to a commuting/distance bike. I have a really solid rack (pannier ready) on the back and trunk bag, but I need some more space to haul a few more items back and forth to work.
Been looking at panniers, and I like the grocery basket type (not metal but a nylon mesh) and I was wondering if anyone had some brands to recommend and is it weird to ride with just one pannier for balance reasons?
My trunk bag carries my crap if I get a flat, mini tool set, extra batteries for the lights, etc. So its pretty full.
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What are you going to carry in them?
Lots of good options depending on your budget and tastes.
Chris
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FWIW, I have this rack: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Journey-Tubular-Alloy-Black/dp/B002994ES4
and older versions of these panniers: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Seymour-Pannier-Black-Single/dp/B009P3KQNO/ref=sr_1_1?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1397585352&sr=1-1&keywords=axiom+seymour
Chris
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What are you going to carry in them?
Lots of good options depending on your budget and tastes.
Chris
My back pack, usually has a few books in it and my lunch, but I'm also thinking a run to grocery and liquor store.
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FWIW, I have this rack: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Journey-Tubular-Alloy-Black/dp/B002994ES4
and older versions of these panniers: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Seymour-Pannier-Black-Single/dp/B009P3KQNO/ref=sr_1_1?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1397585352&sr=1-1&keywords=axiom+seymour
Chris
I have this rack
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003CJH31K/ref=oh_details_o00_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
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The panniers I listed above will work with that. I used them to carry my laptop, change of clothes, lunch, and other items while commuting by bike. I also was able to pack enough for a solo camping trip in them.
Chris
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(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.manhattancruisers.com%2FImages%2FBike_Images%2FMid14%2F14-trike-3-red-600.jpg&hash=f05fc1e967319add3a5ebb80831c2cb25bc6639a)
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(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2F2.bp.blogspot.com%2F-s5L-LpGAqss%2FUAgu8RY61RI%2FAAAAAAAAF4E%2FSHkBNVtcyAE%2Fs1600%2FCargo%252BBike%252BTypes%252B-%252BMomentum.JPG&hash=7e344038e1a0f7e738df7c0ac190bbcf44b255ae)
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and I like the grocery basket type (not metal but a nylon mesh)
My back pack, usually has a few books in it and my lunch, but I'm also thinking a run to grocery and liquor store.
What I did on mine, was order out (Container Store.com or some such) a heavy duty "milk crate" (flimsy ones from Wally World or Staples won't hold up) and zip tie it to my rack. Now I have a place for a backpack, grocery bag, etc. Not to mention, a place to mount a great big reflective "slow moving vehicle" thingee. Anything to help the zoned out idiots see me.
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One pannier isn't odd at all. I have a small set, one bag will hold lunch, extra clothes and the rest of my crap easily.
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For easy grocery getting and such, I use these:
http://www.meijer.com/s/m-wave-double-day-tripper-pannier-bike-bag/_/R-123891
Not easy on-off, but they're reasonably stiff, and the whole top flips open, so it's easy to just drop bags and such in. Either side will easily hold 3 6 packs of soda with room for a big bag of chips too. One quick release buckle broke when the bike fell on pavement with a load in that side, but I've been too lazy to fix it since the top stays down pretty well without it. Had them about 3 years now, and except for that buckle, they're still fully serviceable.
For other rides, I sometimes use one or both of a pair of cheap WalMart backpacks with plywood inserts, hooks on top screwed through into the insert, and the halves of a flat bungee cord screwed on at the bottom for the lower attachment. Reasonably quick on-off, and less bulky than the M-Wave, and it took some tweaking to avoid heel strike.
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FWIW, I have this rack: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Journey-Tubular-Alloy-Black/dp/B002994ES4
and older versions of these panniers: http://www.amazon.com/Axiom-Seymour-Pannier-Black-Single/dp/B009P3KQNO/ref=sr_1_1?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1397585352&sr=1-1&keywords=axiom+seymour
Chris
I like those, I may get them for tripping.
I was thinking more like this http://www.amazon.com/Bushwhacker-Omaha-Bicycle-Grocery-Pannier/dp/B00B4ZKZK0
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If you have cats, this may work well for you: http://www.instructables.com/id/KITTY-litter-pannier/
A friend of mine uses and loves them for their utility (and amusement factor).
Chris
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If you have cats, this may work well for you: http://www.instructables.com/id/KITTY-litter-pannier/
A friend of mine uses and loves them for their utility (and amusement factor).
Chris
That's awesome! If I ever get a Kawasaki KLR (wife give me the OK to get a motorcycle) I'm going to make those for panniers on it.
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My buddy has a Surly Big Dummy with kitty litter panniers he made.
He can haul a lot of gear!
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Ron, the guy I mentioned above uses those panniers on his Big Dummy.
He's nearly 100% car-free.
Chris
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Geez, those kitty litter panniers are awfully darn clever. And here I have several bikes and a Suzuki DL650......
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Anyone familiar with these? Lots of the granola grinders at work have them on their bikes.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001FY429A/ref=dra_a_cs_mr_hn_it_P3028_100?tag=dradisplay-20
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I have seen the Jandd units up close and personal at REI. Very well made, and Jandd makes high-quality equipment. I liked how they unclipped so you could carry them into the store and load up your groceries in them.
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Anyone familiar with these? Lots of the granola grinders at work have them on their bikes.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001FY429A/ref=dra_a_cs_mr_hn_it_P3028_100?tag=dradisplay-20
At $63 each, you might as well get some good touring panniers. The advantage, IMO, with the M-Waves I posted earlier is that they're fairly big and the top opens all the way, so it's easy to set bags, six packs, etc. into them. They won't quite hold a 17" laptop, though, so that was my main drive in making my homemade backpack panniers. That, and at $23 for the set, I don't really care if I have to replace them every few years. I've got three years on the current set, so that's well under $.75/mo if they fall apart tomorrow.
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At $63 each, you might as well get some good touring panniers. The advantage, IMO, with the M-Waves I posted earlier is that they're fairly big and the top opens all the way, so it's easy to set bags, six packs, etc. into them. They won't quite hold a 17" laptop, though, so that was my main drive in making my homemade backpack panniers. That, and at $23 for the set, I don't really care if I have to replace them every few years. I've got three years on the current set, so that's well under $.75/mo if they fall apart tomorrow.
But I want open air ones, like grocery baskets/bags.
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At $63 each, you might as well get some good touring panniers. The advantage, IMO, with the M-Waves I posted earlier is that they're fairly big and the top opens all the way, so it's easy to set bags, six packs, etc. into them. They won't quite hold a 17" laptop, though, so that was my main drive in making my homemade backpack panniers. That, and at $23 for the set, I don't really care if I have to replace them every few years. I've got three years on the current set, so that's well under $.75/mo if they fall apart tomorrow.
and I'd have to modify the Mwaves to work with my trunk that attached to the top of the rack.
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and I'd have to modify the Mwaves to work with my trunk that attached to the top of the rack.
How does it attach? They have a couple of slots for the rat trap already. If it's no wider than the rack top itself, even punching holes and running bolts through would just be securing them to the bike even more. If it's wider than the rack, most panniers are going to be a problem.
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How does it attach? They have a couple of slots for the rat trap already. If it's no wider than the rack top itself, even punching holes and running bolts through would just be securing them to the bike even more. If it's wider than the rack, most panniers are going to be a problem.
Five Velcro straps.
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Five Velcro straps.
Might need some creativity, then. What model is it?
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Might need some creativity, then. What model is it?
Its like this one
http://www.amazon.com/Multi-functional-Bicycle-Shoulder-Handbag-Pannier/dp/B007MJHFUA/ref=sr_1_1/176-9783184-7099764?s=sporting-goods&ie=UTF8&qid=1398367456&sr=1-1&keywords=bicycle+trunk
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Necro
...but I finally bought some panniers, obtained a set of old Gary Fischer grocery panniers for $10.