Forum menu
As a serial overpacking it's hard to know what to leave behind.
When you're out on the road, what do you take and where do you keep it in your back pockets/ bumbag/Saddle bag?
Today I took my small camelbak (1.5l bladder) with a spare tube, allen keys, chain splitter, windproof mid layer, pump, patches, tyre levers x 2, money/wallet, phone and couple of gels.
Is this too much stuff?
pockets, pump and bottles and even tools/tubes in bag or on frame.
pump on bottle cage, tube and tyre levers in v small saddle pack, phone and cash in back pocket with a gillet depending on weather
ditch the camel bak, use bottles, the rest goes in jersey pockets. or if you must in a small seat pack.
Tube, multi tool, patches and tyre levers in a saddle bag.
Bottles on the frame.
Pump, phone and anything else in jersey pockets. Easy.
I don't take anything out with me on the road bike.
Two tubes, co2 pump with spare bottle, levers and power link all in one bottle, drink in the other and jells in jersey pockets.
_tom_ - Member
I don't take anything out with me on the road bike.
What happens if you get a puncture?
Spare tube taped under seat - multitool, micropump, tube patch, tyre patch, chainlink, CO2, phone, gel into back pockets, bottle for drinking.
tube, 2 x levers, multi-tool, puncture kit, co2 - in a bag in middle pocket
Phone in small zipped pocket
Windproof and leg warmers in right hand pocket
Pump, 2 x gels, arm warmers in left pocket
What happens if you get a puncture?
Walk home I suppose. I've never got one on the road. I do actually have my phone in my pocket so I guess I could get a lift.
A cut off bottle on the bike with a mini pump, 2 tubes, 3,4,5 mm allen keys and a CO2 inflator.
Card, cash, phone, gel in pockets.
Leaves room for one bottle on the frame, good for 60 miles or so.
For 80 to 100 miles, tube, CO2 and pump go in one pocket to free up a bottle space on the frame.
Learn to dress well; if it's going to rain and you'll be out in it for 2 hours take a waterproof, out for less, get wet.
You don't need a purse!
Ccard and a tenner...
You don't go very far then?_tom_ - Member
> What happens if you get a puncture?
Walk home I suppose. I've never got one on the road. I do actually have my phone in my pocket so I guess I could get a lift.
2 tubes, 2 CO2 canisters, tyre leavers, pre-glued patches, multi tool and a chain link all in saddle bag (stuff the rules!). 2 bottles in cages on the frame with a combined mini pump/CO2 inflator behind one of them.
Phone, keys, cash and gels/bars/flap jacks etc. in my pockets.
Rules are there for a reason!
2 500ml bottles on the bike, everything else in ya back pockets
(2 tubes, levers, multi tool, 2 CO2 cartridges, lightweight jacket/gilet, phone and cash for tea and cake at the cafe stop)
I use a smallish saddle bag with pump, smallish multitool (has tyre levers & chain splitter built into it), tube, repair kit, bit of change and phone in.
I hate having loads of stuff in my pockets.
Pump, CO2 and bottles go on frame.
Tyre levers, multi-tool, spare tube, patches and a link go in a wee saddle bag.
Gels/bars/phone/ID in a "fuel bag" on the top tube.
Any spare clothing can live in a back pocket.
For longer trips, I take a bigger saddle bag and maybe an extra layer of clothing.
Where do I put my stuff?
As high as possible in my shorts, I have a good rummage before I get on the bike, and nice and central too. Otherwise I find that in the roadie tuck position, it can be all too easy to crush one, and that's not nice!
That is what you meant right? 😉
Rule 51 is my favourite!
😯 are you a camel?Leaves room for one bottle on the frame, good for 60 miles or so
60 miles takes me about 3 1/4hrs on a good day, if I tried it on 1 bottle I probably wouldn't make it! I'd go through 2 750ml bottles in that time and still be dehydrated when I get home
Spare tub under the saddle, co2 in my left pocket, mini tool and phone in my middle pocket, food/pills in the right.
1 bottle for anything up to 2 hours. 2 bottles for the rest.
Up to 60 miles:
1 750ml bottle,
1 jersey pocket with jelly babies in
one with phone and house key
and the other pocket with tube multi tool, tube and puncture repair kit containing a split link.
Money in sock
pump on bike.
On longer rides add another bottle, another tube and some flapjack.
Someone clearly [url= http://yfrog.com/z/nu643tdj ]forgot to tell David Millar and his buddies from Team Sky about The Rules[/url] (Warning: image contains scenes of gratuitous baggage attached to very fast professional racing bicycles, pretentious roadies of a sensitive nature are advised not to click).
I have a small saddlebag for a spare tube, patches and a multitool and a pump clipped to the frame on my road bike, I carry keys and phone in my pockets, I don't like tons of junk wobbling about, it's annoying. Weirdly though I'll happily footle about carrying a Camelbak with several spare kitchen sinks in it on the mountain bikes. Hmm.
The post was addressed to 'roadies' therefore anyone answering other than 'jersey pockets' should not have replied.
Saddlebags - give me strength...
tube or tub under the saddle is the only permitted deviation from 'pockets'.
mboy - Member
Where do I put my stuff?As high as possible in my shorts, I have a good rummage before I get on the bike, and nice and central too. Otherwise I find that in the roadie tuck position, it can be all too easy to crush one, and that's not nice!
That is what you meant right?
Well that would have been where do I put my junk, but a very good answer all the same 😀
Shortcut, wtf do you need an AA membership card when you are out on your bike????
pump on frame
multitool, spare tube, patch kit anf food for longer rides in side jersey pockets. mobile in waterproof bag thing and windproof if necessary in middle pocket.
leyene bag as in pic above with:
1 tube
1 co2 + head
1 tyre lever
1 tiny tiny multi tool
1 £10 note
1 500ml bottle on bike - most cafes will refil with some water if you ask nicely - always a newsagent to buy a bottle if needed.
Rarely a jacket or gilet - check forecasts first
Leyne bag and phone in jersey - no no no to saddle bags!
Rarely a jacket or gilet - check forecasts first
Same here.
All in jersey pockets .Key on cord round neck ,spare tub under seat if on tub rims
2 bottles in cages, pump on cage. Saddle bag: tube, levers, keys. Back pockets: gels & mobile
While there are roadies here... What does it mean when the road in front is flapping his hand? Looks a bit like his wafting his arse?
Pointing out hazzards for those behind him to avoid
he's farted 😉
could be one of many things but I'd guess "obstacle in road ahead" from your description.
probably gravel on road or an area of rough stuff
A point down is a pot hole or man cover
Flick of elbow - take your turn on the front
Spin of the finger - like a whinchman on a helicopter would do normally means get the chaingang working.
Keys at home somewhere near the dog. 1 tyre lever, 1 tube, mini pump on frame. Start barely warm and then take windproof off and stuff in pocket. Paper money. As I therefore have all I need I don't need to suck my thumb/carry security blanket/phone. 1 or two bottles and munchies in pockets.
Someone clearly forgot to tell David Millar and his buddies from Team Sky about The Rules (Warning: image contains scenes of gratuitous baggage attached to very fast professional racing bicycles, pretentious roadies of a sensitive nature are advised not to click).
Ah well, what can you expect of people who go to foreign parts with nice weather to train rather than go out in the rain and tell themselves they're just like Jens Voigt/Sean Kelly/Eddy Merckx[0] 🙂
And for the record, CO2, tube and multi-tool in seatpack, phone, money, food, extra layers in pockets.
[0] Delete as appropriate to age
While we're on kit protocol, what's happened to proper long frame fitted pumps....
I don't entirely get stuffing pockets to bursting. Its not very comfortable and what happens if you want to in out for am hour after tea in your baggy shorts and t shirt?
Seatpack for me. It's tiny and winched up tight to the saddle hull.
I have one of those Rapha purses ("essentials case"..?), but can't bring myself to use it.
Phone, cash card, NHS card for ID, tenner in placcy bag in middle pocket, gel/banana in RH. That's it.
Oh, and I'm v unfit these days, so rides over 2 hours are 750ml + 500ml bottles. Used to be like crikey and go old school - 500ml for 60 mile chaingang was normal..!
While we're on kit protocol, what's happened to proper long frame fitted pumps...
Weird shaped frames.
Possibly 'move to aviod object'.
Er, it's not a macho thing, the lack of drink. I used to do 3-4 hour rides with one bottle and get home with half left, and I still seem to manage on less than some of my mates.
I regularly come home after 50 or 60 mile rides and only use one bottle, but can get through 2 or 3 if I put my mind to it, but then I have to stop for a wee a couple of times.
I think, and I have no evidence at all for this, that a certain amount of dehydration is natural during prolonged exercise; it raises your haematocrit, and therefore makes you a little tiny bit more efficient as the exercise goes on. I appreciate that this doesn't fit with the 'drink lots of our sports drink or you will lose' nonsense that gets pushed on us, but there you go...
