Single release and I have found these to be perfect in unclipping. Foot stays in strong under heavy uphill work but unclips easy when needed. Had a dog on a leash run out in front of me the other day and leash got caught in pedal sending me and the bike for the type of spin we have nightmares about and because of the efficient unclipping I landed on my feet and bike slid on ground. both unmarked. Owner of dog I was NOT impressed with but pedals ABSOLUTTELY!
If you are using your Canyon Endurance to ride to work then these pedals would be perfect. If for exercise, wear cleats and just ride roads no gravel, I would not use these. They are excellent for MTB or gravel terrain and also for jumping on the bike with shoes other than cleats. Light weight yes but wide. They will work on your Endurance but consider what surface and purpose as I’m sure you have. Endurance is a brilliant road bike.
There aren't great: 3 of the pins have already fallen out, just fixing them with Locktite is clearly not enough. (Didn't happen with the pins on my GR-500 pedals).
combi pedals are not so good around town I think? OK on longer distance but stopping and starting around town, you are constantly messing with the pedal to get it the the right side up?
Actually it won't those pedal always have one side heavier and it is always in a same angle just like road clipless pedal did. So after a couple of hours you will instently put your foot on the correct side, just like you do for a road clipless pedal.
@@mohongzhi I have to confirm this, it becomes automatic and as stated due to the weight on one side, they always end up in the same position when you take your foot off them.
They don’t always end up in the same position. Even if one does, the other doesn’t, so you have to mess around trying to flip the pedal while doing your best not to crash. I am getting rid of mine. For the 3 times a year when i might ride clipless, i will get proper SPD pedals. Changing them will cost me less time than the time lost fumbling about trying to rotate the pedals and moving very slowly
You’ve spelled ‘to’ incorrectly on the hoodie. It should be ‘too.’
Thank you.
Thanks we have Fixed it. 😆
I noticed that straight away. That'll be the ex graphic designer in me.
"To" late? Thanks for the video, considering the same on a dual purpose bike.
just got a pair of those, going to mount them tomorrow and give them a try! they look perfect for my use!
Enjoy!! Now 1 1/2 years in and still loving them!!
Indeed a nice pedal, but only for someone with relatively small shoe size. I changed to the PD-T8000 pedal, which is much better for shoesize 11.
T-8000 is the greatest shimano pedal overall
Why are they not great for a smaller shoe size?
Changed the stock pedal pins to M4x8mm. Worked great.
this are very good.super smooth, weight is almost m540/m520 considering the material it has.highly recommended
Yes it was the weight I really liked about these pedals
Life it *too* short! not *to* short. Love the video. Thanks
I have use them to commute and the (small) Platform side work best with my stiff work boots with steel soles.
Yes they are so versatile
i keep hearing these pedals unclip too easy on some situation even on the tightest settings? Are you using single release or multi release cleats?
Single release and I have found these to be perfect in unclipping. Foot stays in strong under heavy uphill work but unclips easy when needed. Had a dog on a leash run out in front of me the other day and leash got caught in pedal sending me and the bike for the type of spin we have nightmares about and because of the efficient unclipping I landed on my feet and bike slid on ground. both unmarked. Owner of dog I was NOT impressed with but pedals ABSOLUTTELY!
They aren't heavy are they
Will they be alright for my new canyon endurace cf8 bike
If you are using your Canyon Endurance to ride to work then these pedals would be perfect. If for exercise, wear cleats and just ride roads no gravel, I would not use these. They are excellent for MTB or gravel terrain and also for jumping on the bike with shoes other than cleats. Light weight yes but wide. They will work on your Endurance but consider what surface and purpose as I’m sure you have. Endurance is a brilliant road bike.
There aren't great: 3 of the pins have already fallen out, just fixing them with Locktite is clearly not enough. (Didn't happen with the pins on my GR-500 pedals).
combi pedals are not so good around town I think? OK on longer distance but stopping and starting around town, you are constantly messing with the pedal to get it the the right side up?
Actually it won't those pedal always have one side heavier and it is always in a same angle just like road clipless pedal did. So after a couple of hours you will instently put your foot on the correct side, just like you do for a road clipless pedal.
@@mohongzhi I have to confirm this, it becomes automatic and as stated due to the weight on one side, they always end up in the same position when you take your foot off them.
They don’t always end up in the same position. Even if one does, the other doesn’t, so you have to mess around trying to flip the pedal while doing your best not to crash. I am getting rid of mine. For the 3 times a year when i might ride clipless, i will get proper SPD pedals. Changing them will cost me less time than the time lost fumbling about trying to rotate the pedals and moving very slowly
I have the same issue
Just got one for my road bike
How is it going so far any problems?
When are you going to buy the second one ? !!!
They're not just 300g but 383g
What brand of biking shoes are you wearing that matches this dual-sided pedal?
Bontrager MTB shoes then. Now wearing SHIMANO XC702 MTB Shoes. Both excellent though Shimano has carbon fiber sole so lighter and stronger under foot.
How did you screw those things to the pedal 😢
Started with fingers and then pointy nose plyers