Carradice Saddlebags

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  • @veLLo - I don't think the traditional bags are designed to be removed on a regular basis, in fact I set mine up so that the buckles are in the interior. I take a nylon shopping bag with me and put everything in it so that while parked I can carry my valuables with me.
    @Vesalius - In the past I've actually built a curled portion of plastic (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYhEsQekd9Q
    into the bag. It worked great, though was a little rattly and overkill.

  • Narrow racks won't hold a large saddle bag, which will falls on both sides.

    To be quite far, this is fairly true, as I also have similar problem when you have little load in them (that promptly slide to either side causing it to falls on the side.

    @Skülly's solution of using a pump is sound, but it's preferable if it doesn't exist in the first place.

    @withered_preacher is on the money about the bag being left on the bike, constantly removing and installing can take it tolls (sadly a must in London's famous London), but leaving the bag in allow it to settle in nicely.

  • TBH, @veLLo you did have a fork with a front rack, ask Bigxtop for a custom bag to fit the dimension of your set up (including decauler), and you got yourself a solid dependable everyday bag without all this swing and nonsense behind it (see what I did there?).

    Or ask Wilson to make one;

  • Yes, I carry boules and vine daily.
    Yes please picture, and another picture of my spoke tension meter with today's newspaper, hehe!

  • I want Wilson to make so many things, but lack of time to organize it, and can't spend on bikes atm too much either...

  • To avoid the hassle of the buckle-unbuckle twice a day, I use this bag support for commuting - which was first around in the 50s-60s but has just been re-manufactured and re-introduced:

    http://www.carradice.co.uk/index.php?page_id=product&under=range&product_id=136

    It's fine for normal loads, but anything heavy puts quite a strain on the saddle rails, so I wouldn't load up with more than 2 boules at a time.

    edit: just scrolled back and realised everyone knows about this already. sorry

  • Could this extra strain lead to a fatigue crack?
    Across both rails.

  • My Spa saddle's rail snapped a while back, after about six months of being used daily with the carradice rack.

    I think the rack contributed to the snapping, but I suspect that it was much more to do with the fact that I had the clamp too far forward...

    however it did make me think that these kind of racks - as convenient as they are - really shouldn't be used for regular, heavy loads.

  • Brooks, five months, rails about in the middle. Barley bag on a classic rack, never more than a couple of kilo in there so I still think the more likely cause is the 95kilo of me every day on uneven terrain.

  • Yes, I carry boules and vine daily.
    Yes please picture, and another picture of my spoke tension meter with today's newspaper, hehe!

    Hahaaaaa I loved this I cackled out loud at work.

    I honestly have no need for the tensionmeter, I have my own now. But then, it seems, neither do you. Let's have a beer, and we can swap exciting saddlebag tales.

  • I am slightly bemused by all this rack chat. My bag just hangs from the leather loops, onto the saddle mounted QR thingy. If I want it to not swing fore and aft, I do the other leather strap up round the seatpost. That's all.

    What am I missing by not having a metal frame?

  • Not much, really. The bags often sag down and interfere with the rear wheel or get in the way of other things, but if it doesn't happen to you then a support rack won't really do much for you.

  • My Barley likes to tilt forward so all my stuff falls out.

  • Also because I haven't got a lot of seatpost showing, it faceplants directly onto my rear tyre and makes a horrible noise/sensation.

  • Ah.I have a lot of seatpost shoaing. Maybe the difference.

  • Anyway...
    A bit of amateurish Saturday morning metalworking (£3 steel tube from b&q) and I'm now happy, it's stable like I wanted it to be and I doubt it would break after the re-used pannier rack clamps.


    1 Attachment

    • 2015-10-31 10.27.03.jpg
  • Wondered about doing this to strengthen mine. Once you got tube is it simply mallet ends flat then drill the holes?

  • Heated the (steel) tubes on gas hob, flattened in vice, then tidied up on bench grinder and drilled...
    Not sure it would work with a hammer, may not flatten both ways together but one way only, and may not be as precise (not that what I've done is very precise...)

  • No worries, i has vice so can do it that way too, hadn't crossed my mind earlier. ta!

  • Further to my mention of Krazy Karpet scraps, I did this a couple of years ago.


    3 Attachments

    • 2015-10-29 21.06.15.jpg
    • 2015-10-29 21.06.40.jpg
    • 2015-10-29 21.07.04.jpg
  • Nice work. May try make meself something to hold my saddle pack stable.

  • Very good solution, I met an audax rider who have a block of wood neatly cut and trim to increase the gap between the back of the bag to the seatpost.

    Not pretty but a lots lighter.

  • Works very well, used it yesterday for the first time like this, then commute today.
    Got rid of front bag until I find a better way than the horrible chunk of Klick Fix plastic bit...


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    • 20151102_082850.jpg
  • Looks solid, my tubus fly is lighter though...

    -ducks-

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Carradice Saddlebags

Posted by Avatar for Velocio @Velocio

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