oblique - don't have looks but a set of time impact road pedals (very similar system to the looks). No problems at all with them, they work great on fixed.
However, check which cleat you have before forking out for a pair of keo pedals (if that's what you decide to do) - older look cleats and those for the newer keos look very similar but are incompatible (the keos are smaller, IIRC).
If you're riding road, I'd probably go with the looks, I've heard eggbeaters give you hotspots when riding for longer periods. Alternatively, virtually any road pedal cleat system will be compatible with your road shoes (you just unscrew the cleat and screw the new one in, and the cost of the cleat compared to the pedal is small, so you're not losing much by changing the cleat) so you're not constrained to just the looks. Again, I highly recommend Time road pedals! This guy knows his stuff: http://www.bikesportmichigan.com/features/rxspedals.shtml
oblique - don't have looks but a set of time impact road pedals (very similar system to the looks). No problems at all with them, they work great on fixed.
However, check which cleat you have before forking out for a pair of keo pedals (if that's what you decide to do) - older look cleats and those for the newer keos look very similar but are incompatible (the keos are smaller, IIRC).
If you're riding road, I'd probably go with the looks, I've heard eggbeaters give you hotspots when riding for longer periods. Alternatively, virtually any road pedal cleat system will be compatible with your road shoes (you just unscrew the cleat and screw the new one in, and the cost of the cleat compared to the pedal is small, so you're not losing much by changing the cleat) so you're not constrained to just the looks. Again, I highly recommend Time road pedals! This guy knows his stuff: http://www.bikesportmichigan.com/features/rxspedals.shtml
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