| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 118.1 | Phender Phun and Phrolic | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Engineer on the Train of Thought | Thu Jul 31 1986 16:20 | 13 | 
|  | Fenders are a pain in the saddle region.
"Shorty" 12 inch fenders are no use at all. I used to use a plastic fender
(Blumel brand, maybe???) on the rear wheel only. Nothing I've seen was 
easy to get on/off, most required 5 or 10 minutes of getting the fit
right again, so I left 'em on for years at a time on my commute bike. The
front fender was a hassle when removing front wheel to lock the bike up, so
I split a set of fenders with my riding partner; each got a rear (I really
got a front fender, but it mounted on the back OK). The front wheel is going 
to manage to get you wet whatever you do, so I just skipped putting a fender
on it.
                                   What phun.
                                   :-) ken
 | 
| 118.2 | I'd rather take the day off | APOLLO::DEHAHN |  | Mon Aug 04 1986 07:14 | 16 | 
|  |     
    You forgot to mention the type of bike you have, I'll assume garden
    variety 10 speed.
    
    There are no "easily removeable" fenders. If you feel you really
    want them then you'll have to dedicate a bicycle to them, if you
    have only one bike then you'll be riding with them all the time.
    Think about the implications of this.
    
    Esge Chromoplast are the nicest looking of all the fenders I've
    seen, and are very strong. The Bluemels get the second best vote.
    Both are readily available.
    
    CdH
    
    
 | 
| 118.3 | Mine worked fine last week; YES, EVERY DAY ! | EUREKA::REG_B | The micro_wave popcorn gourmet | Mon Aug 04 1986 11:56 | 14 | 
|  |     
    	I have a Stump-Jumper Sport that I equiped with ESGE's widest
    mudguards/fenders.  They are a good fit and are good for keeping
    the road water from flying up onto my shoes and back.  I would guess
    that they could give a little more protection if I were riding narrower
    tyres, say 1.5 or 1.75, I have 2.125s on it now.  The only additional
    problem is when riding off-road, I *HAVE TO* avoid sticks, twigs
    and branches.  Come to think of it, I havn't seen wide mud-flaps
    lately, the ones that go on the back edge of the front mud-guard.
    
    	Reg
    
    
    	
 | 
| 118.4 | Bluemel's work fine. | SHIVER::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Tue Aug 05 1986 15:40 | 12 | 
|  |     This is a vote for the Bluemel's, which I have used for years. 
    They're light, easy to fit, and can be convinced not to rattle.
    
    I suggest a small pop rivet through each bracket to keep the fenders
    from sliding fore and aft.  The flap at the bottom of the front
    fender will fatigue and fall off rapidly, no problem.
    
    I always daydreamed about fitting (?mylar?) skirts as well, even
    with fenders you get serious spray in serious rain;  the worst is
    freezing rain and slush which tends to plate your feet...  Brrr,
    I'm glad I don't do that any more...
    						John
 |