Road Cycling Tips - Nobody talks about this.
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 พ.ย. 2022
- You want to be safe, clean, healthy and not broke, Check out these cycling tips.
How to look back without weaving into traffic - How to get your chain back on - Group ride etiquette. Not every cycling tip should be about "How to get faster".
About me:
I am Jurgen Beneke, a 50 year old Bicycle nut, dog fanatic and recovering raceaholic. Former MTB World Cup winner, X-Games Winner and National Champion. Owner and operator at www.dahanger.co - กีฬา
Hi there 🖐️Before you add another comment about using a mirror (like the other hundreds of riders) please watch me testing mirrors and a radar. th-cam.com/video/tN-bq2RkDtw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ic8FO3bfQm8GhhJ0
That neck lifting idea killed me. Live and learn.
Is the chain made of battery acid? Just grab the chain and put it back on lol.
@@dannyphantom121 That's why cycling shorts/bibs are black
I remember dropping my chain to the inside going up a low grade climb in one of my early Cat5 races many years ago, one of the more experienced riders put his hand behind my butt pushing me along and said "pedal slowly and upshift". The guy saved my race and taught me your valuable tip #2.
He was likely waiting years to do that, touch another man's butt.
Yeah, the fastest way to recover is using the front derailleur to move the chain back to the big ring.
Did he remove his hand after that?
@@dooleh84hahaha
who could forget a golden palm
"Best bike for you is the one you already own". Love that! So true!!!!
Until it gets stolen
33?
Friends don't let friends buy bikes on credit. Love it! Top advice!
Yup, just keep riding that old bike and save up for the new one.
Never trust a bike shop with a finance dept. !!
I do not borrow for anything. No car payments in over 25 years. Ok tiny mortgage .. but that is all
If you really want to buy a bike, save a dime, quarter or dollar per mile cycled each week. You'll get there soon enough.
@@secretagent86 yeah well done you , what a pity that not everybody in life has had your financial availability. To some credit is the only way to attain something . How dare they want something eh , according to your self indulgent mantra they should just do without …
Turning your head really helps us drivers too because we know you are engaged with us. Love tip 3! 😂
Yes, and most cyclists are drivers too. Thanks for the feedback
Learned "turning your head" the hard way. Put new front/back lights on the bike to be able to cycle in the winter (no snow in Houston generally) and kept twisting to see if the rear light was working. Long story short, ran into a curb at speed, body went forward into the handlebar and the gearshift lever punctured my groin through fleece sweatpants. Lot's of blood and a trip to the ER where they determined the lever knicked the artery in my right leg. Funniest part was the instructions from the ER to stop on the way home & pick-up a 10 lb bag of potting soil to use as a compress on the abdomen while the artery healed. Was really drugged and my son told me I loudly kept asking if these were medieval times and were going to send me home with a bottle of leaches as well.
Oof, you REALLY got lucky there! Could've been much worse. Turning my head is something i've been slowly developing for the last 4 or so years as a MTBer since i also use my downhill (and only) bike for groceries or stuff like that. Been riding for far longer but since i've been sharing more and more the road with traffic i've had to learn to check my back whenever needed. It's almost impossible to do with a winter jacket on the rain since the hood blocks most of your view to the sides, not even talking about behind, as much as i hate them i'd consider buyng rear view mirrors for thoose days when i need/want to ride on the rain.
@@Ferrari255GTOI like to put the hood on first and the helmet on top. The helmet straps keep the hood in place when I turn my head.
@@MunichUWH i've been getting unlucky tryng to get a helmet, every time i'm ready to buy that full face helmet i want something happens. Just before this christmas my rear shock blew, and the previous time my front brake pissed itself and since it was of "unknown origin" (Hygia elite) i ended up getting a set of Code R brakes instead
Were you running stem shifters?
And especially slow down if you’re turning your head!
Love your article. I did see that a couple of people did note that you said , " you can't have a mirror on your helmut or your bars". Absolutely , you don't put a mirror on you bars. But, I've ridden over 125,000 miles on roads , and I would never ride without my small mirror attached to my sunglasses. I don't even have to move my head , to be able to see perfectly behind me. Just like driving a car...I spend just as much time looking back , as I do looking forward. Thanks for your tips..... Appreciate it.
I have a bar end mirror-used it for 40 years-suits me!
They're my handlebars so I put a mirror on them because I can.
Goodnight
Being a year-round cyclist in the Adirondacks, the head-turn is probably the single most important tip to follow when on the road. I know when I'm driving a cyclist with their head on a swivel is much more noticeable than one with their eyes laser-focused ahead. And since it's a form of communication/recognition of surroundings I think it creates some appreciation from all parties involved. Plus, it's just safer!
Although I know this video applies to riding on the roads, I would also add using trail etiquette as well. I’ve seen way too many occasions where riders do not announce when they are passing walkers. This is easy to do but yet so many bikers fail to do it. Recently, I was riding and coming toward me was an elderly couple probably in their mid-80s, out for a leisurely stroll. Behind them also coming towards me, was a biker moving at a pretty good clip. He decided to pass this elderly couple just as I was passing them, meaning he was in between me and the elderly couple. He nearly gave the elderly woman a heart attack as he almost clipped her arm. This kind of stupidity gives all bikers a bad reputation. If I would’ve thought about it sooner, I would have turned around and apologized to the elderly woman on behalf of all bikers.
thats what the bell is for......😊@@escapedfromnewyork
@@escapedfromnewyork You (the biker) are the one moving at speed. Are you waiting til too late? Especially with older walkers, ringing a bell or speaking up 50 - 70 feet out isn't too early, to avoid startle reaction. I could be in the middle of conducting an orchestra on my earbuds and throw my arm out at the bassoons just as you spin by. The one coming from behind is the one responsible for not having a collision; you might even have to slow down (gasp!).
As a bassoonist and a cyclist, I find this very funny
I've experimented with bells and vocal warnings at different distances away from pedestrians, and it NEVER fails to startle the daylights out of them. I feel terrible, but better than a collision. But truly no distance seems perfect.
@@arterialturns I have also done this type of testing.
The best and safest method is to approach at speed with a silent drive train. Do not let the hub click.
Aim right at the middle of their back while watching their walking pattern.
About ten feet before you get to them swerve quickly to the left side and around them.
Often they are starteld and jump, but who cares you are past them at this point.
I have actually called out to people while 200 feet back, and had them movve to the side...then JUMP IN FRONT OF ME at the last moment.
Great tips. I'll try them next time I'm on the road. A great tip nobody talks about is to signal for the person behind if there is a pot hole, a cone, or any obstacle instead of just avoiding it. When this happens, the cyclist in front is hiding a cone and the one behind cannot see it and may not be able to avoid it. In general, tips like these when people are riding in groups.
I always do this, it's common courtesy.
Wow, Tip 1 might be the best safety tip I've heard in a long time. Completely agree!
I really enjoy your video style mate. Also the statement 'The best bike is the one you own' is so true. I'm just getting back into cycling after some bad injuries and my bike is a Giant SCR 3.0 from 2005 with a broken front derailleur (i just ride in the center ring - yes its a triple :) ) I look forward to more from you :)
ahh, the good old triple chain rings. Tell a youngster that you mostly ride in the middle ring is like speaking a different language. :)
I ride a triple. In spring front derailleur broke. I put it in the middle for the two weeks for a new one to arrive. Shocking how often ( who derailleur off) the chain popped onto the big ring.
i have the same year - mine was the least expensive model (ocr 1 or ocr3 i can't recall now). but was so 'embarrassed' that it was a triple. not my newer bike but i love it still.
2005 was a good year. My Trek is from then!
I love triple! Blimey if I'm building a tourer for myself it MUST have a triple up front, I'll hunt one for the build because for me, the more options when distance riding the better.
1) relax and drop shoulder
2) move opposite hand towards centre of handlebars
3) I'd add stop or slow down on the pedals and practice it somewhere safe. The tendency to swerve could increase in a more tense situation so certainly one to practice straight away and compare turning with and without peddling.
I've just started cycling again after a 4 or 5 year break and the difference in confidence and competence over that time is surprising in particular, for me, flexibility when looking back so maybe some kind of stretching is in order too.
That chain tip is a useful one too.
Thanks for this.
For those who might struggle w/#1 as I do, I'd suggest a garmin varia radar. Been a game changer for me.
Also don’t forget the super powerful balancing skills you gain being able to look back, could save you in an emergency situation
WTF use is that on a 70 mph FREEWAY when you are looking for a gap to cross a merge lane??
Half of my highway rides involve hundreds of big and BIGGER trucks going by.
I have no use for Saturday peloton pussies rides.
The head-turning tip was excellent. The other two I had learned over time. Thank you for sharing.
P.s. I love my old bike!
Yes, dropping the traffic-side arm is a really great technique. But the primary safety strategy is to keep a sustained and easy view of following traffic by good use of a high quality rear view mirror.
Yes agree 100%, I finally found a good mirror after trying several, and living on a busy high speed narrow country road I ride with one eye on that mirror all the time. It's wide angle gives me a smoother view when handlebars move and the optically even convex makes it more predictable as to how many seconds I have until the approaching vehicle passes.
One of my spare bikes doesn't have one (yet) and I find it way more challenging to ride and dealing with traffic, especially ultra quiet EV's.
Even with a mirror an inexperience rider can drip into traffic without knowing.
@@xmateinc I use the mirror to monitor traffic and actually deliberately "drift into traffic" to ensure they get the wake-up call that they must overtake with a suitable safety margin. They need to 'change lane to pass'.
* Stay Safer; Ride Wider!
@@petesig93 Good strategy. It's probably a good thing for them to think you haven't seen them either, that will encourage them to give you a wide berth if your line isn't dead straight.
@@alasdair4161 yes, that is my exact strategy. I monitor the mirror routinely and any approaching vehicle that appears aggressive, or in any dodgy road/traffic setting I utilise what I call 'the wiggle' - a calculated wander out into the road, when the following car/truck is 100-200 metres behind me.... sometimes even when just 50-70m back.
It. Works.
*Stay Safer; Ride Wider!
Also, remember to look ahead before you look behind. Potholes, car doors opening, cars pulling out, sand or debris in the road, pedestrians. Trust me , I know this.
I'm French woman
I'm 72 years old and I've been cycling since I was a child, and not to play racer as I still see it now.for chains I was already doing that when I was 10 years old.
I'm surprised to see that bikes don't have rear-view mirrors.
because when you turn round the road in front of you may have changed.
In car parks I could always spot my bike with its mirrors.
Don't forget that your only bodywork is your bones and that all the technology in the world won't protect you from a collision with metal or stone.
Love this, I will make a bike mirror video very soon. Curious to see which ones work the best and does it eliminate the need to turn your head???? Thanks again, be well.
@@cyclingskills I've got those little ones that fold into the end of your handlebars. I was skeptic because they're really small, but they have a sort of fish-eye lens so it works great. And I also can't understand why the majority of cyclists don't have one (some even have a rear radar.... WTF???)
You can purchase a mirror for your helmut, no helmet, you can add a mirror to your bike bar. I'm 75 and some of my cycling videos are about safety, I have a mirror on my helmet.
I just got back into cycling after about 40 years of motorcycling. I have a mirror and definitely encourage that. I also drive a dump truck and can't for the life of me understand why cyclists don't think they need to see me coming on the narrow 2-lanes up here on the north shore of Lake Superior.@@cyclingskills
69 last week, neck went away 20+ years ago, turn like that and I see stars. "Thirdeye" for this guy on all my road bikes since. Good infomative video.
Some of the best no-BS advice ever!
You’re so right about expensive bikes! Here in NYC, as I’m sure I’m other parts of the world too, there’s so much pressure to ride an expensive bike. After playing into that game and spending over 10K on a bike I ask myself “am I really enjoying myself more?”. My honest answer is “no”. As a weekend non-racer the bike only gave me some bragging rights but didn’t make cycling more fun to be honest.
I really like these tips. Thanks. I'll give the dropping my shoulder and the chain tricks a try.
I appreciated the tips on looking back without swerving. I can’t go on a bicycle ride without my rear view mirror, still there’s times when I turn around to see something… I will Always remember those two tips.
4 years riding, and im still learning 👍👍
10 years and still :D :D :D
Tip 1. Just the other week I was slowly riding on some gravel, heard something coming up from behind, looked round, obviously pulled on handlebars a bit and the front wheel slid out from under me. At least it was the left side so no damage to the bike's derailleur. My ribs are still a bit sore, but not as sore as my pride at making a fool of myself in front of the neighbour's 8 y.o. kid! 😀
Sending healing vibes
Great video! All cyclists, seasoned or not, could use this refresher. Tip 3 is invaluable.
Hoping it was an icecream... 😅 Thanks for great tips!
Never buy your bike through Internet, it's not wedding. Always try it in person.
Brilliant, don’t swerve into traffic and don’t spit on people.Thanks a lot there Tips.Shouldn’t be on the road without a rear view mirror!
As a mountain biker [who avoids road riding as much as I can, except to commute to the trails] #1 was really helpful 👍🏻
Great, thank you for sticking around as a MTB-rider. Bikes are bikes.
@@cyclingskills I tried it out today, brilliant!
I too know some MTBikers who get 🤯 when 2 cars pass them. What lame whiners 😋
@@gerrysecure5874I like @cyclingskills attitude! 😊 Yours....
As an older rider, thought I was the only one who didnt have the right knack for turning to look back while in traffic. Thanks for these tips.
PS: per your final comment, I think I'll also keep going on my Marin 18 speed, upright, Lady Fairfax(2018) - so far, so good !
... top tip for not having dirty hands if your chain drops. Wax the chain, don't use liquid lubes. Might not be everybody's cuppa but it surely leaves drivetrain much, much, much cleaner that the best dry lube. So contact with your hands will leave you with no marks or very, very little.
Top marks for turning your head/upper body. Such a underrated skill.
Cheers!
I.
This was an informative, humorous video even though the chain hack was the only one I hadn't heard of. It's not a trick I could use (long story) so I make use of latex gloves leftover from Covid. I really like the 'sponsored by nobody in the bike industry' statement at the end. 😅 Very clever. 😊
That snot moment got me laughing out loud, mannnn 😂 good one!
This is my first video of u, my friend, and I've subscribed simply because of your choice to encourage cyclists to stay away from credit cards for their dream cycles. The best bike for me is the one I own!
I love it! Cheers, Sir!
Thanks 🙏
There's got to be a market for cycling snot
Since I started hot waxing my chains I have never gotten my hands dirty after dropping the chain!😀
Holding your bike up with your neck to fix the chain- Great tip !!!
Taking a hand off the bar to look back? This is what caused me a bad crash. Just before I got my hand back on the bar I hit a bump that bounced me forward and I missed the bar, fell forward over the bars, landed on my back on burning hot asphalt shattering my scapula.
Great tips, good advice, making people laugh and think...whats not to like?!
Love from England bro 🙏
Thanks so much for the "no swerve" advice!! I never thought to bring my shoulder down. Will give it a try on this weekend's ride. Cheerios!
Favorite part about riding bikes is the awesome snot rockets that you produce. Simple things in life.
Great tips! Btw at 2:35 there's one more option to get the chain back on: pick a stick from your surroundings to help guide the chain.
..while easing the chain tension by pulling the rear derailleur pulley wheel slightly forward. I hope your r.d. is clean!
Or some leaves to grab the chain with, so you don't touch it directly.
@@vidarv.9010 I use 2 sticks, one in each hand. First I dismount and rest the bike on its saddle, so that I'm not wrestling with a bike with a mind of its own. I push the (ususally dirty!) r.d.with one stick, using the other to lift and guide the chain back on. Time doesn't matter, as I'm retired and don't do cycle racing!
The trick I use is get off, grab the chain at the bottom of the chainring, plonk it on the ring and spin the chain ring counter clockwise. If you keep doing it by the slow peddle way you'll eventually bugger up your front mech.
I do by grab chain and lift on but joy of waxed chain, personally I haven't had a chain issue in say 12 years, even SRAM etap front derailleur doesn't throw chain
As someone who has been riding bikes since I could walk I never thought the head turn was something people needed to learn. I thought it was just second nature. Great tip for teaching my wife, she recently expressed interested in road riding
Exactly, not everyone has been cycling forever. Simple tasks can be hard for beginners. Thanks for the comment 👍
I follow all these good guidlines. The video is GOOD, full of humor, good sense, And NOT SPONCERED BY ANYONE! Attaboy!
Another way to put a chain back on is with a stick. Run the stick up above the chainring and you can put the chain back there. Where I ride there is always a stick within 10 feet.
That’s actually fun, on point, concise and highly beneficial.. what caught my attention to the video is the thumbnail, suggesting the way to turn you head while riding, and the auto demonstration of the video confirmed it.. this is an issue that I’ve seen no one talking about. This is really important and it’s a struggle for those who don’t know how to turn their head back while riding “me included, but not anymore”. And for the best bike for you is the one you already own, that’s the truth! I’d love to watch more of your content🎉
Thank you so much. Really appreciate your comment. 👍
Great video, love your sense of humour. Thanks for the tips, ride safe 😊
wow, such a fresh air kind of stuff there comparing to boring GCN videos! keep it going!
I find bar end mirrors much safer than turning around . You always know what’s coming , so much better then the occasional look back. It’s impossible to be turning to look back at every car or truck. But yes sometimes you might have to turn for some reason and you do want to keep your line without swerving for sure.
I've always wondered about number 1 and now thanks to you I need wonder no longer! Very helpful indeed!
Coolio -thanks
Get a mirror!
I love this. Turning around without swerving has always been difficult for me.I'm going to try your tips
You got this!
This video has the most information per unit time on all of TH-cam! Thanks!
I was trying to pack lots of info in there. 😬 Thanks
Love that first one especially. Learned some surprisingly useful 'why didn't I think of that' tips from taking a motorcycle safety course recently that applied to (solo) road cycling. My favorite is bobbing slightly to the left and right (with a front light on) as you approach an intersection or driveways/parking lot entrances. Vastly increases your visibility to oncoming left turning cars and cars pulling out in front of you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great advice. I've actually recovered the chain that way several times over the years. Thank you!!!
just get a mirror for $30 and you can see well ahead for any wide loads, trucks, cars when they are coming and may be a problem to you.....problem solved as you know well ahead of time.....😊
I sold my last deFaileur bike 5 years ago. Good riddance. I still do solo 100+ miles anytime I feel like it on my 50 and 70 lb IGH steel is real bikes. My 2 tours had 120 lbs for my Rohloff14 to scoff at. LOL.
Great stuff. Best life tip you gave - don’t finance toys! There’s room to grow like not financing anything (but a house and that only once) but that’s an advanced life hack! Step one though, don’t finance toys.
I have known this technique for over 30 years. Was routine for us on our club touring rides back in the '80s.
Your third chance of getting the chain on without getting your hands dirty - keep a pair of disposable nitrile gloves in the saddle bag.
I've actually never heard about the downshift/upshift trick to fix a dropped chain, brilliant!
Another etiquette measure in group rides is to point out dangers on the road such as holes to those behind you. The tips for backflipping are pure gold, thank you very much.
the number of times my cycling buddies swerve into traffic because they can't keep moving straight while looking around is too many.
Plus holding the bike with your neck is a great trick!
Tip #1 - Get a Garmin Varia RTL radar unit. Then you don't need to turn around nearly as often. Just to double check when turning across traffic making a left (in the US) or right (in the UK) turn.
I love my Varia but my buddy who rides with a mirror knows there is a car behind us before I do. Still, I prefer the Varia
@@zimmejoc Is your Varia's audible alert turned off? Mirrors are great but you have to be looking at them, Varia alerts you. Plus gives you 10-15 actual speed readings for the vehicle (about every 10 yards) as it approaches, and logs that into (together with location and time) into your .fit file for that ride. Can be handy later at court f something bad happens.
@@paulflory3532 the beep is on. It’s just he sees a car in his mirror about a second before I get the beep. I know how fast it is coming though, he does not. He’ll say, “car”, I’ll hear a beep and I’ll say “It’s coming at 45 mph” it actually works really well.
@@zimmejoc I mostly ride solo, and I guess I just like to focus forward, enjoy the scenery, and not stare at a mirror. To each his own. I also frequently hear the vehicle, sometimes before the Varia picks it up.
@@paulflory3532 I'm not a mirror guy either (hence the varia) but depending on wind conditions, I don't hear the car until I get the beep. When I used to ride in Texas with the speed limit being 75 and cars often approaching at 80+ mph the beep would sound and the car was on me within a second. Thank goodness for super wide shoulders.
Great video! Been riding since the 70's and all of your tips are right on, one thing for sure I have never done was to drop a chain, new tech is not for me, I'm still pushing steel bikes with friction shifting along with tubular tires, one of my best riding rigs was a Steel TRACK bike frame that was Modified to a road bike a screamer it was, I've done many 100 mile plus rides on it with many mountain rides in the mix as well. I'd ride from Down town San Jose over the Santa Cruz mountains to the Santa Cruz and back. One thing I would do when riding when hearing an approaching car coming from the rear, I'd stick my arm out while pointing out a few fingers to let them the motorist know that this is my space, this way I am able to continue with my ride without braking my pace, this also worked out well for me when approaching and navigating my way through high way over passes. Keep on peddling.
Great comment, thank you 🙏 Ride on
Old school,
I too like steel frame from Germany
Wow, did you ride on 9?
@@arterialturns There are much better routes than 9...up OSC, cut across on Summit, and absolutely fly down Soquel-San Jose Rd to Capitola!
Love the visual demonstrations. Hilarious! Thanks for the good tips.
Glad you enjoyed it!
So glad you came into my feed, love your personality and your content :-)
I've never thought to lift with my neck from the saddle. Great tip! Btw - the third way to reset a chain without ever getting your hands dirty is to use a waxed chain. Definitely agree buy what you can afford. That said - my priority is cycling. I drive a 2012 pickup and live in a modest dwelling. So I can spend on my passion without any guilt whatsoever. For me, new kit is inspiring and I like to be inspired to ride.
Love it - shiny expensive cars are so overrated. 100% agree with you. I only have one hobby and it’s cycling. So that’s where I spent my money. Cheers-
When an automobile overtakes and immediately shows brake lights Watch Out: They are about to do something sketchy.
Yeah, learned that the hard way. Crashed into a Porsche Cayenne last year who decided to overtake and brake to park on the road.
Smashed one of his rear lights, those things are pretty expensive 😕
Best cycling tips video I have seen on YT in a while ! Subscribed instantly ! Greatings from France
Well done! Thank you. The voice of experience and lessons learned.
Easiest way to look behind you without weaving is to use a mirror.
Easiest way to avoid dropped chain is to use belt drive
This is the easiest way to make a fool of yourself, too. No cyclist uses a mirror.
@@MatzeMumpitz honestly, if you're afflicted by that kind of vanity, biking might not be for you :l
@@KRIGBERT Biking with a mirror is not for me, yes.
@@MatzeMumpitz and that's okay, just don't go shaming people for not caring about stuff like that.
I wax all my chains so I have no fear of dirty hands…. Great video!! 👍🏼👊🏼
Is the chain made of battery acid? Just grab the chain and put it back on lol.
Didn't expect such nice comedic edits in a biking video. Well done!
A a child in the 1960s we had mirrors on the handle bars.
If you don’t want dirty hands, WAX YOUR CHAIN!!😂
That, and if you don’t want to be buying a new chain every 2000 miles… wax it. EASILY triples the lifespan of your chain and reduces wear on the entire drivetrain.
@@user-us6pp3un4i Yes!!
Great tip on keeping up with the Jones’s on bike envy. Great tip. Want vs Need is the perennial battle.
The turning round relaxing the shoulder is a massive tip thank you.
Newbie subscriber here. Saw your video in my side bar. Clicked out of curiosity. That first tip is awesome. I cycle a TREK Hybrid FX 1 Stagger and I ALWAYS find myself sweerving all over the place when I'm doing shoulder checks. That shoulder check tip is a keeper. Now I know what I've been doing wrong.
Had to give this video a thumbs up after receiving that snot to the face haha great work!
Really good tips, greatly explained.
Great and useful short video. Thanks. 👏
That snot rocket part had me cackling!
Love your presentation style. Keep em rolling
Another trick for getting the chain back on is to lift your bike with the seat stay so it lays horizontal and turn the pedals with your other hand. The weight of the chain will help it grab back on to the chainring.
Stumbled on this.
Wow. You are charming and educational.
Thanks.
You have a great style, Jurgen- funny and informative!
How to look back safely - such an underrated and under taught skill. Great video, thanks!
For a dropped chain, find a stick on the side of the road to wrap the chain from the bottom of the chainring back onto the teeth to keep your hands clean. Or wax your chain!
Also…
It’s like the algorithm knew I move been wanting to buy a brand new bike, and pushed this video my way. Thanks for that last free tip about keeping up with the Jones’.
Riding my '96 Benotto 850 Itslia with rim brakes, downtube mechanial shifters and loving it.
Great tips! Stay safe!
Thank you. Down tube shifters 👍 yeah 💪
The older the bike, the harder you have to work to keep up, " Stronger, you will be" - YODA!
Hahaha
The info for getting the chain back on was pure gold👍Thank you😊
Great tips as a 50 years young cyclist,now a LOT of drivers should be taught these pearls of wisdom 😂
So true!
Super difficult to not swerve when turning your head. This tip is genius!
Great tips. I've been riding since the mid-80s and these tips were never given to me but are something I just picked up during training and racing and are second nature to me. But, I've never even thought about it and that you did and made them known and explained why they are needed, is a great benefit to those that weren't aware or for those getting into cycling. Liked and subscribed! My two favorite bikes by the way are a 1990 Zullo with 11-speed Athena and a 1989 Tesch S-22 with 11-speed Record. My newest bike is a 2008 BCM CX01 with 10-speed SRAM (flat bar Double Tap trigger shifters) and my oldest is a 1983 Miyata Pro with 6-speed Dura-Ace AX that I bought new.
I'm a beginning road biker and really appreciated your tips, and your humor!
The tip for #1 was really helpful. For #2 I have no problem as I wax my chain. #3 is also on point. I have no money, so I make do with what I have...
Tip 2 is pretty neat! Will try it at the next opportunity. Chance 3 would be to wax your chain, not perfectly clean to touch but fairly close. Plus I've never had it mark long pants legs & if you have to bring your bike into your home it's not smelly or liable to stain anything nearby.
The bike you own is really the best bike. I have a mid-90s part-carbon bike, and I pass and "race" lots of people on the bike trails who have much better bikes, but just aren't as fast or as demented, haha. It's always more about the rider than the bike (btw, it's not about "beating" anyone, it's more about racing against yourself and having fun).
The look-behind is a good thing for recreational cyclists to practice before testing it out in traffic.
Fantastic video, great delivery... Brilliant
I loved that "The Best Bike is the one you own". I am going to follow that. 😊
This was very informative, with some great tips. Thank you.
Instant fan! Liked, Subscribed. Agree 100% with every word. Thank you and safe pedaling!
I never heard the chain tip before and I've been cycling for years!
Excellent, at last someone talking sense about riding and bike acquisition - well done and thanks
How to look back without swerving. Who knew? Not me, That bit of advice is worth saving a life. Thank you
Great tip about looking back! Love it!
Great video. I've seen experienced riders weave out into traffic BECAUSE they were checking for traffic. Thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge with us.