New Radio Show! And More Of The Rigorous Product Testing For Which I Am Famous!
Firstly, I was on the radio again this morning (I have my own radio show now in case you've been avoiding me lately) and you can listen to it...
...right HERE!
I recommend you do, too, because it's a very exciting time here in New York City and I talk about it all. Mainly, drivers have been killing cyclist at an alarming rate, and in response the NYPD has announced they'll be cracking down on the most dangerous driver infractions. In practice, this basically means they've been running Citi Bikers off the road "for [their] safety:"
As well as blasting Vision Zero messages out of parked vans:
Secondly, speaking of my radio show, it means that for the first time in awhile I have to commute again just like the rest of you schmucks. Granted, it's only once a week, but in my defense I've grown weak and soft and could not possibly be expected to commute five days a week at this point in my life. Indeed, as the World's Greatest Living Cycling Writer (And Broadcaster) I need to be incubated as much as possible with my brain soaking in Palmolive and the comforts of home at arm's length at all times.
Still, my one (1) commuting day does involve riding the nearly 20 miles each way between the Bronx and Brooklyn, and so when a marketing person reached out to me and asked me if I wanted to try some bikey bags I readily accepted. See, now that I'm a broadcaster, I have to travel with my laptop and a voice recorder just in case and of course my horns and whoopee cushions and other assorted novelty noisemakers so I can make wacky sounds while I'm on the air.
Anyway, the bikey bags in question are from a Canadian company called "Two Wheel Gear." And the bags I got are this one:
And this one:
Both of which attach to your bicycle rack pannier-style by means of this clip system that works really well:
Basically you hook the black clips onto your rack, then you engage the red clip with your thumb, then you're ready to go.
Anyway, lately I've been commuting on my Milwaukee, but for various reasons I won't bore you with I decided to test the bags with the State Core-Line fixie Bicycling asked me to write about back in May:
At this point in my life I'm just too old and dorky to care about how...well, dorky I may look riding a circa-2007 Fixed Gear Gallery entry come to life. Anyway, it's a fun bike, it's got eyelets for a rear rack, and sometimes you just need a no-frills bike you can ride in sneakers. Also, I have to admit that if I see yet another fucking earth tone gravel bike I'm going to puke, so in a way riding a mail-order fixie with white rims is my own personal act of rebellion.
In any case, yesterday I finally got around putting a rack on the State, which was a straightforward affair other than the fact that I had to file down the very bottoms of the rack stays a few millimeters to clear the great big integrated washers on the rear axle nuts. After mounting both bags on the bike I decided I liked the profile of the briefcase better, and so that's what I used.
Oh, and naturally it was raining this morning, which meant I got to use the rain cover that comes with the bag:
Here's the bag without the cover:
Now I should say that a bike like this--short wheelbase, lots of toe overlap, etc.--isn't ideal for using with panniers. If you're going to load a bike up you want some stability. (I was once ejected from the
Bike repair essentials (tube, patches, tire levers, mini pump, multi tool)Laptop and power cable (I've gone from a MacBook to a Chromebook and I haven't looked back)Phone chargerVoice recorder just in caseWindbreaker just in caseExtra t-shirt just in caseU-lockAnd I think that about covers it.
Oh, and the clip system was indeed highly convenient, and disengaging the bag was (don't type snap don't type snap) ...a snap:
And, most importantly, it rained pretty much the whole way there and about half the ride back home, and my cheap Chromebook and everything else stayed perfectly dry.
So there you go.
Durability and so forth remains to be seen, and I haven't tried the backpack, but so far the briefcase is promising.
Oh, and I was also wearing the shorts Outlier sent me way back in 2009:
I hadn't worn them years, but this morning I mended a tear in the crotch seam and put them back into service, and I kind of feel like a schmuck for waiting this long because they're pretty comfy.
And they still had sand in the pockets!
...right HERE!
I recommend you do, too, because it's a very exciting time here in New York City and I talk about it all. Mainly, drivers have been killing cyclist at an alarming rate, and in response the NYPD has announced they'll be cracking down on the most dangerous driver infractions. In practice, this basically means they've been running Citi Bikers off the road "for [their] safety:"
#NYPD run over #nyc #bicycle to stop them from running a red light ton”prevent reckless driving.” pic.twitter.com/AITjqNwYiZ— Garvey Rich (@Garvey_Rich) July 5, 2019
As well as blasting Vision Zero messages out of parked vans:
Oh yeah, they'll have this cyclist death problem licked in no time. pic.twitter.com/HcKajHibT0— Bike Snob NYC (@bikesnobnyc) July 8, 2019So yeah, as you can see, things are going just great on this end.
Secondly, speaking of my radio show, it means that for the first time in awhile I have to commute again just like the rest of you schmucks. Granted, it's only once a week, but in my defense I've grown weak and soft and could not possibly be expected to commute five days a week at this point in my life. Indeed, as the World's Greatest Living Cycling Writer (And Broadcaster) I need to be incubated as much as possible with my brain soaking in Palmolive and the comforts of home at arm's length at all times.
Still, my one (1) commuting day does involve riding the nearly 20 miles each way between the Bronx and Brooklyn, and so when a marketing person reached out to me and asked me if I wanted to try some bikey bags I readily accepted. See, now that I'm a broadcaster, I have to travel with my laptop and a voice recorder just in case and of course my horns and whoopee cushions and other assorted novelty noisemakers so I can make wacky sounds while I'm on the air.
Anyway, the bikey bags in question are from a Canadian company called "Two Wheel Gear." And the bags I got are this one:
And this one:
Both of which attach to your bicycle rack pannier-style by means of this clip system that works really well:
Basically you hook the black clips onto your rack, then you engage the red clip with your thumb, then you're ready to go.
Anyway, lately I've been commuting on my Milwaukee, but for various reasons I won't bore you with I decided to test the bags with the State Core-Line fixie Bicycling asked me to write about back in May:
At this point in my life I'm just too old and dorky to care about how...well, dorky I may look riding a circa-2007 Fixed Gear Gallery entry come to life. Anyway, it's a fun bike, it's got eyelets for a rear rack, and sometimes you just need a no-frills bike you can ride in sneakers. Also, I have to admit that if I see yet another fucking earth tone gravel bike I'm going to puke, so in a way riding a mail-order fixie with white rims is my own personal act of rebellion.
In any case, yesterday I finally got around putting a rack on the State, which was a straightforward affair other than the fact that I had to file down the very bottoms of the rack stays a few millimeters to clear the great big integrated washers on the rear axle nuts. After mounting both bags on the bike I decided I liked the profile of the briefcase better, and so that's what I used.
Oh, and naturally it was raining this morning, which meant I got to use the rain cover that comes with the bag:
Here's the bag without the cover:
Now I should say that a bike like this--short wheelbase, lots of toe overlap, etc.--isn't ideal for using with panniers. If you're going to load a bike up you want some stability. (I was once ejected from the
Bike repair essentials (tube, patches, tire levers, mini pump, multi tool)Laptop and power cable (I've gone from a MacBook to a Chromebook and I haven't looked back)Phone chargerVoice recorder just in caseWindbreaker just in caseExtra t-shirt just in caseU-lockAnd I think that about covers it.
Oh, and the clip system was indeed highly convenient, and disengaging the bag was (don't type snap don't type snap) ...a snap:
And, most importantly, it rained pretty much the whole way there and about half the ride back home, and my cheap Chromebook and everything else stayed perfectly dry.
So there you go.
Durability and so forth remains to be seen, and I haven't tried the backpack, but so far the briefcase is promising.
Oh, and I was also wearing the shorts Outlier sent me way back in 2009:
I hadn't worn them years, but this morning I mended a tear in the crotch seam and put them back into service, and I kind of feel like a schmuck for waiting this long because they're pretty comfy.
And they still had sand in the pockets!
Published on July 08, 2019 12:23
No comments have been added yet.
BikeSnobNYC's Blog
- BikeSnobNYC's profile
- 25 followers
BikeSnobNYC isn't a Goodreads Author
(yet),
but they
do have a blog,
so here are some recent posts imported from
their feed.

