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#11
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 14/09/18 14:27, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 9/13/2018 9:06 PM, jbeattie wrote: On Thursday, September 13, 2018 at 4:21:10 PM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: I am not using it for heavy loads, just for sensitive ones. For heavy loads I have cinch straps and heavy duty bungees. You should put your delicate cargo in a pannier. Grant Peterson recently publicized an interesting trick. In his example, the delicate cargo was an expensive camera of some kind. He was using a bike with a metal front basket. He used two cargo nets. One he stretched across the top of the basket to form a sort of trampoline. The camera sat on top of that net, suspended above the baset floor. The other net went above the camera to hold it down and keep it from bouncing out. Sounds good for shaking something up by amplfying every bump. It seemed to me that would work pretty well, assuming you had a basket on your bike. I always preferred to carry my camera in a snout bag mounted on my chest supported by a pair of straps going over shoulders and crossing on the back. My legs tend to be very good at smoothing out bumps. Second preference was the handlebar bags that mount on a forward projection holder. A couple of short shock cords to the front rack damped bounces. (It wouldn't work for Joerg, of course.) If you need more capacity, buy a trailer.Â* I'm sure your wife would allow you to buy a bicycle trailer, maybe. Maybe... Alternatively, you can build one. Yet Another B&*&$% Bicycle Trailer seems to be a common meme on youtube. |
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#12
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 9/14/2018 2:15 AM, news18 wrote:
On 14/09/18 14:27, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 9/13/2018 9:06 PM, jbeattie wrote: On Thursday, September 13, 2018 at 4:21:10 PM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: I am not using it for heavy loads, just for sensitive ones. For heavy loads I have cinch straps and heavy duty bungees. You should put your delicate cargo in a pannier. Grant Peterson recently publicized an interesting trick. In his example, the delicate cargo was an expensive camera of some kind. He was using a bike with a metal front basket. He used two cargo nets. One he stretched across the top of the basket to form a sort of trampoline. The camera sat on top of that net, suspended above the baset floor. The other net went above the camera to hold it down and keep it from bouncing out. Sounds good for shaking something up by amplfying every bump. You're trying to minimize acceleration, not amplitude. With Grant's scheme, the camera will move more (greater amplitude) but will endure far less acceleration. I always preferred to carry my camera in a snout bag mounted on my chest supported by a pair of straps going over shoulders and crossing on the back. My legs tend to be very good at smoothing out bumps. In the days of mechanical cameras, I did something similar. I had the straps worked out to where I could easily unclip one and shoot as I rode. Now that my camera's tiny and digital, it's usually in the mesh side pocket of my handlebar bag. I think it's much more rugged than my old film camera. This one has almost no mechanical moving parts. -- - Frank Krygowski |
#13
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 2018-09-13 18:06, jbeattie wrote:
On Thursday, September 13, 2018 at 4:21:10 PM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: On 2018-09-13 12:51, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Thursday, September 13, 2018 at 10:30:13 AM UTC-4, Joerg wrote: On 2018-09-12 17:21, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 16:19:00 -0700, Joerg wrote: Does anyone know where to buy ESGE bicycle rack straps like this in the US without costing more than the whole rack? https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uIcAA...Bv/s-l1600.jpg They are rubber which the blistering sun has now shot. In Europe these used to cost $4-5. Adjustment is without any excess rubber dangling into spokes and stuff. Or maybe something similar that has such seamlessly adjustable rubber straps. Bungees or Arno straps are not so cool for sensitive loads. Adjustable Flat Bungee Cord? See Amazon, about $3.50 each. https://www.amazon.com/Keeper-06119-.../dp/B0044FPNIG Bingo! I didn't know they made adjustable bungees which is exactly the function I was looking for. It's on our Amazon shopping list now. Thanks, John. Frank and Sir: This does work for me. Reason why Arno strap won't work well for this particular job is that I often carry softer materials and sometimes even a large fruit or vegetable. A bursting plastic malt syrup jug would be real fun on a bike. Arno straps or cinch-down straps can be adjusted but their pressure comes on hard so I'd have to carry buffer material. For the rack I need something with flex that can be adjusted in tension, no extra buffer material needed. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ Meantime your rubber bungee cord expands on bumps and thus you risk it coming off if the hook lets go. Then you might lose your load. I am not using it for heavy loads, just for sensitive ones. For heavy loads I have cinch straps and heavy duty bungees. You should put your delicate cargo in a pannier. Those are nearly always full. The right one with tools, lock, phone, spare tube, battery and stuff. The left one with water, electrolyte mix, food. ... If you need more capacity, buy a trailer. I'm sure your wife would allow you to buy a bicycle trailer, maybe. The only trailer that would work for me is the Bob trailer with suspension. Yeah, I could buy one. However, flexible straps cost a lot less. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#14
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 00:27:20 -0400, Frank Krygowski
wrote: Grant Peterson recently publicized an interesting trick. In his example, the delicate cargo was an expensive camera of some kind. He was using a bike with a metal front basket. He used two cargo nets. One he stretched across the top of the basket to form a sort of trampoline. The camera sat on top of that net, suspended above the baset floor. The other net went above the camera to hold it down and keep it from bouncing out. It seemed to me that would work pretty well, assuming you had a basket on your bike. I used a similar trick to carry a ripe tomato over Smith Street before they paved it. (And narrowed it by painting a fog line a couple of feet inside the other fog line and calling the space between a "bike lane", but that is another story.) The tomato was in a plastic bag in the bottom of a pannier. I put the hooks of a bungee out through the holes in the wire pannier, one end on each side of the reflector bolted through the hinge, brought the ends over the top of the basket, and hooked them to the other end. Then I lifted the middle of the outside bungee over the middle of the inside bungee, repeating until it was twisted so tightly that the eyelet in the middle was just barely big enough to pull the handles of the plastic bag through. I pulled on the handles until the tomato was snug against the bungee, then tied the handles to the rack to keep it there. This naturally pulled the tomato toward the rack, so I fastened the other bungee by its middle to the middle of a side the same way I'd attached the first bungee to an end, brought it over the top of the side, and hooked the ends over the twisted bungee to pull it back the other way. Nowadays I use the trick for delicates too large to be kept from swinging into the sides of the pannier, so instead of using a second bungee, I damp the oscillations by lightly stuffing a plastic bag with crumpled plastic bags, putting the handles through a hole close to where the cargo might bump, and tying off elsewhere to hold them in place. Wedged in by the cushions, the cargo doesn't swing. It's lucky that I don't need this trick very often; it cuts way down on what else I can carry in that pannier. -- Joy Beeson joy beeson at comcast dot net http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/ --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
#15
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 2018-09-12 16:19, Joerg wrote:
Does anyone know where to buy ESGE bicycle rack straps like this in the US without costing more than the whole rack? https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uIcAA...Bv/s-l1600.jpg They are rubber which the blistering sun has now shot. In Europe these used to cost $4-5. Adjustment is without any excess rubber dangling into spokes and stuff. Or maybe something similar that has such seamlessly adjustable rubber straps. Bungees or Arno straps are not so cool for sensitive loads. Some feedback in case someone else needs rack straps. I found this and ordered a set of straps: https://www.rivbike.com/products/dutch-double-top-strap It looks even better than the original ESGE straps because the hooks are metal. The small plastic ones were always leaving that iffy feeling and frequent head turns to see if the load was still there. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#16
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On Friday, September 21, 2018 at 5:50:54 PM UTC-4, Joerg wrote:
On 2018-09-12 16:19, Joerg wrote: Does anyone know where to buy ESGE bicycle rack straps like this in the US without costing more than the whole rack? https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uIcAA...Bv/s-l1600.jpg They are rubber which the blistering sun has now shot. In Europe these used to cost $4-5. Adjustment is without any excess rubber dangling into spokes and stuff. Or maybe something similar that has such seamlessly adjustable rubber straps. Bungees or Arno straps are not so cool for sensitive loads. Some feedback in case someone else needs rack straps. I found this and ordered a set of straps: https://www.rivbike.com/products/dutch-double-top-strap It looks even better than the original ESGE straps because the hooks are metal. The small plastic ones were always leaving that iffy feeling and frequent head turns to see if the load was still there. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ A heck of a lot more complicated than a couple of Arno straps and not nearly as secure either. Cheers |
#17
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 2018-09-21 23:30, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Friday, September 21, 2018 at 5:50:54 PM UTC-4, Joerg wrote: On 2018-09-12 16:19, Joerg wrote: Does anyone know where to buy ESGE bicycle rack straps like this in the US without costing more than the whole rack? https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uIcAA...Bv/s-l1600.jpg They are rubber which the blistering sun has now shot. In Europe these used to cost $4-5. Adjustment is without any excess rubber dangling into spokes and stuff. Or maybe something similar that has such seamlessly adjustable rubber straps. Bungees or Arno straps are not so cool for sensitive loads. Some feedback in case someone else needs rack straps. I found this and ordered a set of straps: https://www.rivbike.com/products/dutch-double-top-strap It looks even better than the original ESGE straps because the hooks are metal. The small plastic ones were always leaving that iffy feeling and frequent head turns to see if the load was still there. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ A heck of a lot more complicated than a couple of Arno straps and not nearly as secure either. For some loads such as vegetables in a bag Arno straps aren't good because they have no flex and would squish stuff. I'll use them for bus rack strapping as you had suggested. And for very large loads like a box to the Fedex depot. What's complicated about the Dutch straps? Move the slider to adjust tension to load size, hook in, done. I have used them for decades. Most of the time the just sit strapped and flat. You can slide newspapers underneath or books for a meeting without doing anything. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#18
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On Saturday, September 22, 2018 at 10:19:29 AM UTC-4, Joerg wrote:
Snipped For some loads such as vegetables in a bag Arno straps aren't good because they have no flex and would squish stuff. I'll use them for bus rack strapping as you had suggested. And for very large loads like a box to the Fedex depot. What's complicated about the Dutch straps? Move the slider to adjust tension to load size, hook in, done. I have used them for decades. Most of the time the just sit strapped and flat. You can slide newspapers underneath or books for a meeting without doing anything. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ Gee I didn't know about Arno straps being no good for securing vegetables in a bag. I guess I'd better stop doing that huh? I mean, I've only been doing that for the past 40 odd years whenever I go go grocery shopping. That's not to mention all t he delicate stuff I've secured to my MTB off road touring bike when on a two week trip and used those very same Arno straps to secure the stuff. One thing about Arno straps is there's NO WORRY at all about some fiddly plastic thingie breaking at an inopportune time. Arno straps are probably the easiest strap to adjust too. Use what you like but don't be surprised if all that stretching of the straps causes damage to your delicate items and or food during your rough rides.. Cheers |
#19
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Adjustable rubber rack straps, where to buy?
On 2018-09-21 14:51, Joerg wrote:
On 2018-09-12 16:19, Joerg wrote: Does anyone know where to buy ESGE bicycle rack straps like this in the US without costing more than the whole rack? https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/uIcAA...Bv/s-l1600.jpg They are rubber which the blistering sun has now shot. In Europe these used to cost $4-5. Adjustment is without any excess rubber dangling into spokes and stuff. Or maybe something similar that has such seamlessly adjustable rubber straps. Bungees or Arno straps are not so cool for sensitive loads. Some feedback in case someone else needs rack straps. I found this and ordered a set of straps: https://www.rivbike.com/products/dutch-double-top-strap It looks even better than the original ESGE straps because the hooks are metal. The small plastic ones were always leaving that iffy feeling and frequent head turns to see if the load was still there. Arrived and works great. Yesterday it carried a ream of paper. The metal clasps are unfortunately square instead of round so it'll rattle a lot on metal racks when on a bumpy road. I stripped two 1" sections of jacket from large TV coax cable, slit lengthwise, slid over the last rack cross member (where the clasps grab onto), secured the jackets with electrical tape - no rattling. IME this is the fastest way to secure a casual load on top of a rack. I am using this method since 1982. The slider adapts to the load size in a second and no excess cord tangles down into the spokes and needs to be tucked like it does on regular loading straps. Since this double strap flexes it also won't cause brown or mushy spots on a load of pears in a bag or other fruits and vegetables. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
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