active network: BikeMagic : Golfmagic : OutdoorsMagic : RCUK : Visordown  
Welcome to OUTDOORSmagic
Forgot your password?
Have an account?
  •  
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Blogs
  • Features
  • Gallery
  • Routes
  • Forum
  • Shop
  • Ask Us
Join  
RSS  
Advertise  
Blog  
Outdoors News  
Gear News  
Travel News  
Jackets  
Other Clothing  
Footwear  
Packs  
Tents  
Sleeping  
Other Equipment  
Gear News  
Buy online  
Classifieds  
Local shops  
Forum  
Outdoor News Blog  
Editorial musings  
Gear Blog  
Thoughts from the Outdoors  
Outdoor Features  
Hill skills  
Health and fitness  
Travel features  
Gear features  
Add image  
Latest images  
OM Members' album  
All albums  
Front page  
User guide  
Gallery Forum  
Walking  
Scrambling  
Meets and Partners forum  
Search routes  
Map a route  
Routes forum  
Latest Posts  
New discussions  
Hot Threads  
Trip Reports  
New Member Introductions  
Soapbox  
Walking and Climbing  
Gear  
Meets and Partners  
Starting out?  
Travel  
Lakeland 100 Chat  
tgo magazine live letters archive  
Gallery  
GPS help and advice  
Classifieds Section  
Online Shopping  
Second Hand  
Local Shops  
Ask a gear question  
See gear answers  
Forum
You are looking at: Home : Forum :

Gear

Bike to bothy
 
Latest Posts | New Discussions | Hot Threads | Forum TopicsHelp | Settings | Public Profile
 Search forum: 
Bike to bothy
How to carry the load?
spacer image
1 to 16 of 16 messages
spacer image
 
Show/hide user stats
rob dixon 3
09/02/10 00:12
 Winter Mountaineer 619 forum posts 1 bookmark

Am planning to take bikes to remote bothy for several days shortly, on several miles of good track, some of it being tarmac estate road.  Not done this before and wondering how best to carry all the gear, given that the last part will be a carry.  We'll have axe, crampons etc, so will be heavily laden.  I don't want to take panniers (more to carry later), so am looking at lashing a day sac to the rack and carrying the big pack, or lashing the big pack, carrying the day sac.  What do others do?  I think the big sac could be unstable on the rack, so wonder about securing a bar or two across it, to improve stability?  It has a limit of 25kg, but I guess if it's rough in places, we may need to reduce this - or our speed!

Thanks.

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Peter Clinch
09/02/10 09:51
 Alpine improver 5216 forum posts 5 photos 9 reviews

What I do is... experiment.  A heavy load on the rack will have it moving around no matter how stable the carrying platform is (the legs will sway from side to side) which plays merry hell with handling so comfort be damned I suspect you'd be better off with the big pack on you.  But do try some options and be ready to change.

If you wear a helmet make sure a big pack doesn't interface with it and prevent you looking where you're going (better not to bother with it than be limited in what you can see with it IMHO)

Pete.

 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Derek Goffin
09/02/10 11:37
When we cycle tour I have made 2 pvc waste pipe holsters that are fixed to my pannier rack and bolt to my saddle. I use these for my tent poles, which fix firmly. This allows a large rucksack to sit on the rack vertically fixed to the top of the tent poles with a webbing strap. light bungees go from this webbing down to the rack for location. I used this setup to cycle in to Culra bothy from Dalwhinnie with: front panniers, rear panniers, the aforsaid 70 litre rucksack and then stopped to pick up firewood on the way for cooking  for several days on a small woodstove. Then we discovered a narrow bouncy suspension bridge and I nearly fell in rather than unpack my bike. If it is Culra you are going to dont go to the lake take the left hand track. It is better for cycling in every way
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Matt C
09/02/10 12:41
 Himalayan mountaineer 20458 forum posts 809 photos 2 articles 20 bookmarks

It might be a rather pricey option, unless you can hire them from anywhere(?), but how about a trailer?

Otherwise I think I agree with Pete - if there's a big pack and a small pack and a rack and your back - I'd probably go for wearing the big pack. But I'd also look to split the load as evenly as possible - cram as much as possible into the small pack on the rack, especially dense, heavy stuff, and cinch the big pack down as much as possible.

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
rob dixon 2
09/02/10 13:10
 Mountain scrambler 405 forum posts
Many thanks all.  Yes, it is Culra, one of my favourites.  Was able to drive to boat house in Geordie Oswald's day!  I'll do some experimenting...
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Peter Clinch
09/02/10 13:42
 Alpine improver 5216 forum posts 5 photos 9 reviews

Culra.... chatting with pals who've been there more recently than I have (over a decade ago), I hear that with the improvements it no longer contrives to Colder Than The South Pole!

Top place, need to get back...

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
mattias law
09/02/10 14:48
 Lowland rambler 159 forum posts

have a look at the set-up used here

http://www.alpkit.com/spotlight/arrowhead/

i dont know much about carrying loads on a bike but i'd say that if you were going to be doin mountain biking a trailer would be a major no-no. they really affect your balance and tire you.

 Send to friend
Edited: 09/02/10 14:49
Show/hide user stats
Peter Clinch
09/02/10 15:00
 Alpine improver 5216 forum posts 5 photos 9 reviews

Trailers... the ride in to Clura is on a track so it's rough but it's not really "mountain biking".  The point of a trailer is it doesn't affect the bike much, because it's not altering the centre of mass.  A single wheel like a BoB Yak would be good, but only worth the cost if you'd use it a lot.

And if you worry about getting tired... #1 way of feeling more tired on a bike as far as loads go is wear a heavy pack...

Pete.

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Steve I
09/02/10 18:00
 Lowland rambler 566 forum posts 5 reviews 1 bookmark 4 classifieds

Agree with peter about loads on the bike upsetting the handling. I put a rear rack on my cyclocross bike a few years ago for winter road rides. With a rack pack, sandwiches, and flask on board the handling of the bike is horrible. I'd go with the smaller pack on the bike.

 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Derek Goffin
09/02/10 21:37
My bike handles differently with that weight on but I am not comfortable with loads on my back for anything except short rides. As I mentioned above my overloaded bike was hard to lift up steps and wheel across a wobbly suspension bridge it was fine to ride everywhere except in soft sand by the lake
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
chasetrailbuilda
10/02/10 00:11
 Mountain scrambler 264 forum posts 16 photos 2 bookmarks

A mateand I, have been using bikes to do 3day wild camping trips in Scotland, for thepast 6 years, using mainly tracks.

We both carry 35+8 litre rucksacs, but not too full, soas to kep them away from our helmets.

We then both have beam racks with a little light stuff on, and I carry my tent strapped to my bars, and all thefood is put into a plastic rubble sack and slung over the cross bar.

This means that the majority ofthe weight is on our backs, and therefore more controlable. I also find that by putting someweight on thefront of the bike it stops thefront wheel from lifting. 

I'll try and dig out some pics.

 Send to friend
This member’s stats are private
Derek Goffin
10/02/10 09:35
As chase says above, some weight on the front is good ideally maybe 25% of what is on the back, but not really on the handlebars, ideally very close to the steering axis, so front panniers not a front rack, but you are improvising for one trip not setting off round the world.
 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Andy DJ
10/02/10 13:05
 Lowland rambler 144 forum posts 17 photos 1 review 1 bookmark

http://www.outdoorsmagic.com/members/images/15872/Gallery/Gary.JPG

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Andy DJ
10/02/10 13:09
 Lowland rambler 144 forum posts 17 photos 1 review 1 bookmark

sorry forgot to add, pic above is Chasetrailbuilda

(thought I'd save you the trouble mate!)

a pic of bikes without riders.

http://www.outdoorsmagic.com/members/images/15872/Gallery/loaded_bikes.JPG


It depends what sort of riding you're planning on doing, I'd say if just on the land rover tracks you can afford to put more weight on the bikes. If you're planning on doing any singletrack or rougher ground you need most of the weight on your back to give you the manoeverability of the bike.

 Send to friend
Edited: 10/02/10 13:30
Show/hide user stats
rob dixon 2
10/02/10 13:17
 Mountain scrambler 405 forum posts

Again, many thanks to all - really helpful.

Pete - yes, it was a chilly place!  Last there in Feb 2004, I think, with sons as training before an alps trip.  It was so cold we were having to go further and further out onto the iced river to get water and wash.  But a fantastic spot.  I wonder if this block of ground (between roads) has the largest number of Munros - will work it out one day...

 Send to friend
Show/hide user stats
Adrian Partridge 2
10/02/10 14:30
 Lowland rambler 2 forum posts
Lucky for Rob I'm going with him and have a trailer I towed 2 kids around in for years. By the time I finished with trailer, kids, family kit etc the whole lot added over 150 pounds to the weight of the bike. I don't know it will handle the section beyond the estate track but it will get us to there perhaps. It does make traction on the rear wheel of the bike an issue when it is heavily laden literally lifting the back wheel off the ground, so you lean back and the front wheel lifts instead! And yes it is knackering.
 Send to friend

 You say:
Message: (1500 character limit)
(Using the Quick Post will also register you with the site)
First Name: *
Last Name: *
Email: *
Security Image:This is a security image
Write the characters shown in the image above (Case sensitive)
I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct
  
  
 

Change stats view
spacer image
bookmarkMake external bookmarkAdd to My Bookmarks

« Previous thread   -   Next thread »
spacer image
Forum jump  
Spacer image
Sign up to our weekly newsletter
Shopping
Berkshire Outdoor Leisure
Fox's Outdoor
Springfield Camping
Cave and Crag
E-outdoor
EDZ Layering
Trek Plus
The Photon Shop
Trekmates
Park Cameras
The Outdoor Shop
Ellis Brigham Mountain Sports
Latest on the site
Arc'teryx Photo Comp At ShAFF
There's a £500 plus a bunch of kit for budding amateir adventure photographers in this unique competition.
Fort William Mountain Festival: Incoming - Video
Under a week to go before this year's Fort William celebration of mountain culture and here's the showreel trailer!
Weekend Mountain Weather Outlook
All the weather information you need to plan your outdoors weekend.
  • OM On Tour In The Sunny North East
  • Walna Scar Closed To Motor Vehicles
Competitions

There are currently no comps running on OutdoorsMagic
Sign up to our twitter feed
Promotions

New to Cotswold Outdoor
Rab Microlight Alpine Jackets for men and women
Dog day afternoons
Activities for you and your dog courtesy of Sainsbury's Finance
Facebook

Become a fan of OutdoorsMagic

Twitter

Follow us on twitter

Newsletter

Sign up to our free newsletter

Meet some partners

Meet partners in our forum

Other Immediate Media Sites

Parenting

  • Junior
  • Practical Parenting
  • MadeForMums

Active

  • AVReview
  • BIKEmagic
  • GOLFmagic
  • OUTDOORSmagic
  • RoadCyclingUK
  • Visordown

Our eCommerce Platform

About OutdoorsMagic

  • About us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & conditions
  • Support
  • Advertise with us

Forums

  • Trip Reports
  • New Member Introductions
  • Soapbox
  • Walking and Climbing
  • Gear
  • Meets and Partners
  • Starting out?
  • Travel
  • Lakeland 100 Chat
  • tgo magazine live letters archive
  • Gallery
  • GPS help and advice
  • Classifieds Section

Reviews

  • Jackets
  • Other Clothing
  • Footwear
  • Packs
  • Tents
  • Sleeping
  • Other Equipment

Home

  • Join OutdoorsMagic
  • Advertise with us
  • Take our articles (RSS)

News

Blogs

Features

Gallery

Routes

Shop

Ask Us

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms + conditions
  • Advertise with us

© Immediate Media Company Ltd 2011. This website is owned and published by Immediate Media Company Limited. www.immediatemedia.co.uk