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Date: 18 Sep 2007 23:07:40
From: cjcrawford@idcomm.com
Subject: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.

Thanks,
Chris





 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 15:58:36
From: Camilo
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Sep 18, 3:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com >
wrote:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris

It depends on what you mean by "winter jacket". How big is your
jacket.

A normal bicycle windbreaker/rain shell will not only easily and
unobtrusively fit into a jersey pocket, there are many largish seat
packs that would accomodate one. A fleece jacket or lined shell would
be a different story.

If you look at an online retailer such as performance, they will give
the volume of the pack as well as the dimensions. It would be easy
enough to fold or roll your jacket and then figure out how large of a
pack you need.



  
Date: 20 Sep 2007 14:44:30
From: Paul Kopit
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
You don't need a bag.

Get a pair of those shoe laces that are no-tie. They are coils of
elastic. Wrap each shoe lace over a seat rail. Then they sell a
clip, perhaps for tents, that has 2 holes and a pinch clamp. Put each
end of the shoe lace through the pinch clamp. Roll up your jacket.
Put one end of the roll through the loop you've made with the shoe
laces and tighten the pinch clamp. Do the same on the other side.
You have a rolled jacket attached to the back of your seat.

I've use the shoe laces to hold food for trips, etc.


 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 14:41:32
From: russellseaton1@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Sep 19, 1:38 pm, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote:
> On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 08:03:54 -0700, "russellseat...@yahoo.com"
>
>
>
>
>
> <russellseat...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >On Sep 18, 6:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com>
> >wrote:
> >> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> >> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> >> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> >> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
> >> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
> >> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Chris
>
> >The Jandd Mountain Wedge III bag is very large and can accomodate
> >jackets and other stuff. I know people who use it on week long
> >supported rides in Colorado to carry all of their clothes during the
> >day. Including Showers Pass Elite jacket, long finger gloves, leg
> >warmers, balaclava, arm warmers. If used unexpanded, you don't need
> >the straps.
>
> >http://www.jandd.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=FMW3
>
> Dear Russell,
>
> The Nashbar expanding version works well and is about $10:
>
> http://www.nashbar.com/profile.cfm?category=600066&subcategory=600010...
>
> I've been using them and the JanD for years and find two problems.
>
> First, the rail straps eventually wear through. Slipping short, ugly
> sections of inner-tube over them solves that problem.
>
> Second, the seat-post strap eventually tears off from where it's sewed
> onto the nose of the bag. There's a huge plastic flap inside the bag,
> curving from top to bottom past the nose, so I stick an ice-pick in a
> stove flame and poke holes through the front to create a pair of slits
> for a strap. The fabric melts, so the edges don't fray, and the strap
> does better when run through the plastic.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Carl Fogel- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

The Nashbar bag is similar to the Jandd medium size saddlebag, not the
huge Wedge III bag Jandd sells. I have the Jandd medium saddlebag and
my complaint with it is it swings around a lot. The straps do not
allow it to be tightened to the rails. Velcro does not keep the
straps from sliding towards the post. My seatpost velcro strap is
wearing out and will likely break sometime soon. Straps through the
rail seem just fine. Top of the bag is getting a hole worn in it from
rubbing the rails I suspect. Nashbar bag does not have the horizontal
reflective strap like the Jandd. I hang multiple rear blinkies on
that Jandd strap.



  
Date: 19 Sep 2007 18:38:13
From:
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 14:41:32 -0700, "russellseaton1@yahoo.com"
<russellseaton1@yahoo.com > wrote:

>On Sep 19, 1:38 pm, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote:
>> On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 08:03:54 -0700, "russellseat...@yahoo.com"
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> <russellseat...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> >On Sep 18, 6:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com>
>> >wrote:
>> >> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
>> >> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
>> >> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
>> >> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
>> >> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
>> >> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>>
>> >> Thanks,
>> >> Chris
>>
>> >The Jandd Mountain Wedge III bag is very large and can accomodate
>> >jackets and other stuff. I know people who use it on week long
>> >supported rides in Colorado to carry all of their clothes during the
>> >day. Including Showers Pass Elite jacket, long finger gloves, leg
>> >warmers, balaclava, arm warmers. If used unexpanded, you don't need
>> >the straps.
>>
>> >http://www.jandd.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=FMW3
>>
>> Dear Russell,
>>
>> The Nashbar expanding version works well and is about $10:
>>
>> http://www.nashbar.com/profile.cfm?category=600066&subcategory=600010...
>>
>> I've been using them and the JanD for years and find two problems.
>>
>> First, the rail straps eventually wear through. Slipping short, ugly
>> sections of inner-tube over them solves that problem.
>>
>> Second, the seat-post strap eventually tears off from where it's sewed
>> onto the nose of the bag. There's a huge plastic flap inside the bag,
>> curving from top to bottom past the nose, so I stick an ice-pick in a
>> stove flame and poke holes through the front to create a pair of slits
>> for a strap. The fabric melts, so the edges don't fray, and the strap
>> does better when run through the plastic.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Carl Fogel- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
>
>The Nashbar bag is similar to the Jandd medium size saddlebag, not the
>huge Wedge III bag Jandd sells. I have the Jandd medium saddlebag and
>my complaint with it is it swings around a lot. The straps do not
>allow it to be tightened to the rails. Velcro does not keep the
>straps from sliding towards the post. My seatpost velcro strap is
>wearing out and will likely break sometime soon. Straps through the
>rail seem just fine. Top of the bag is getting a hole worn in it from
>rubbing the rails I suspect. Nashbar bag does not have the horizontal
>reflective strap like the Jandd. I hang multiple rear blinkies on
>that Jandd strap.

Dear Russell,

Oops! You're right, I missed the mammoth dimensions of your JanDD and
just looked at the picture.

Cheers,

Carl Fogel


 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 12:04:31
From: Scott G.
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?

> As someone with *no* experience with these types of saddle bags, I've no
> clue what would be tall enough. I'm 1.8 m (5'10") tall and ride a
> pretty generic 57 cm frame. Tall enough?
>
> \\paul


Look for the Carrradice Barley bag, will easily fit.
Has tie points on the bag lid to hold a wet jacket, use a couple toe
straps.


www.wallbike.com

Scott G.



 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 08:03:54
From: russellseaton1@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Sep 18, 6:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com >
wrote:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris

The Jandd Mountain Wedge III bag is very large and can accomodate
jackets and other stuff. I know people who use it on week long
supported rides in Colorado to carry all of their clothes during the
day. Including Showers Pass Elite jacket, long finger gloves, leg
warmers, balaclava, arm warmers. If used unexpanded, you don't need
the straps.

http://www.jandd.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=FMW3




  
Date: 19 Sep 2007 12:38:47
From:
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 08:03:54 -0700, "russellseaton1@yahoo.com"
<russellseaton1@yahoo.com > wrote:

>On Sep 18, 6:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com>
>wrote:
>> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
>> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
>> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
>> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
>> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
>> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Chris
>
>The Jandd Mountain Wedge III bag is very large and can accomodate
>jackets and other stuff. I know people who use it on week long
>supported rides in Colorado to carry all of their clothes during the
>day. Including Showers Pass Elite jacket, long finger gloves, leg
>warmers, balaclava, arm warmers. If used unexpanded, you don't need
>the straps.
>
>http://www.jandd.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=FMW3

Dear Russell,

The Nashbar expanding version works well and is about $10:

http://www.nashbar.com/profile.cfm?category=600066&subcategory=60001006&brand=&sku=6798&storetype=&estoreid=&pagename=Shop%20by%20Subcat%3A%20Wedges%20%26%20Frame%20Bags

I've been using them and the JanD for years and find two problems.

First, the rail straps eventually wear through. Slipping short, ugly
sections of inner-tube over them solves that problem.

Second, the seat-post strap eventually tears off from where it's sewed
onto the nose of the bag. There's a huge plastic flap inside the bag,
curving from top to bottom past the nose, so I stick an ice-pick in a
stove flame and poke holes through the front to create a pair of slits
for a strap. The fabric melts, so the edges don't fray, and the strap
does better when run through the plastic.

Cheers,

Carl Fogel


 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 13:08:04
From: John
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Sep 19, 12:22 am, Paul Myron Hobson <phob...@gatech.edu > wrote:
> Chalo wrote:
> > cjcrawford wrote:
> >> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> >> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> >> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> >> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on.
>
> > A Carradice bag like the Nelson Longflap is good for that, if you are
> > tall enough that it doesn't drag on the tire or otherwise get in the
> > way...
>
> As someone with *no* experience with these types of saddle bags, I've no
> clue what would be tall enough. I'm 1.8 m (5'10") tall and ride a
> pretty generic 57 cm frame. Tall enough?
>
> \\paul

Probably. To be sure, measure from your saddle loops* to the top of
the tire. If it's greater than 11", the nelson ought to clear. See
here:

http://www.wallbike.com/carradice/longflaps.html

*if you don't have saddle loops and/or have limited space from seat to
tire, I recommend using the Carradice SQR.

http://www.wallbike.com/carradice/uplift.html

It's not the cheapest fix; however very convenient.

John McMurry



 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 03:05:28
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
cjcrawford wrote:
>
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on.

A Carradice bag like the Nelson Longflap is good for that, if you are
tall enough that it doesn't drag on the tire or otherwise get in the
way. It's easiest to mount a Carradice bag if you use a Brooks or
similar saddle with eyelets, but in the past there have been brackets
that mount on saddle rails to provide eyelets for saddles that are not
so equipped. Rivendell has a fancy and expensive one made by Nitto.

A Carradice bag can work well hanging from the handlebars, too, if the
bike is tall enough.

Chalo




  
Date: 19 Sep 2007 00:22:16
From: Paul Myron Hobson
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
Chalo wrote:
> cjcrawford wrote:
>> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
>> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
>> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
>> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on.
>
> A Carradice bag like the Nelson Longflap is good for that, if you are
> tall enough that it doesn't drag on the tire or otherwise get in the
> way...

As someone with *no* experience with these types of saddle bags, I've no
clue what would be tall enough. I'm 1.8 m (5'10") tall and ride a
pretty generic 57 cm frame. Tall enough?

\\paul


   
Date: 20 Sep 2007 08:57:21
From: Matt O'Toole
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 00:22:16 -0400, Paul Myron Hobson wrote:

> Chalo wrote:
>> cjcrawford wrote:
>>> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
>>> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
>>> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
>>> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on.
>>
>> A Carradice bag like the Nelson Longflap is good for that, if you are
>> tall enough that it doesn't drag on the tire or otherwise get in the
>> way...
>
> As someone with *no* experience with these types of saddle bags, I've no
> clue what would be tall enough. I'm 1.8 m (5'10") tall and ride a
> pretty generic 57 cm frame. Tall enough?

I think so.

But if all you need to carry is a jacket and gloves, a bag like the
Nelson is overkill. My Goretex jacket and gloves fit fine, along
with my tools and a spare tube, in an expandable wedge seat bag like this
one from Performance:

http://www.performancebike.com/shop/profile.cfm?SKU=23826&subcategory_ID=2310

Matt O.


   
Date: 19 Sep 2007 22:09:41
From: Luke
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
In article <fcq85n$ji5$1@news-int.gatech.edu >, Paul Myron Hobson
<phobson@gatech.edu > wrote:

> Chalo wrote:
> > cjcrawford wrote:
> >> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> >> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> >> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> >> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on.
> >
> > A Carradice bag like the Nelson Longflap is good for that, if you are
> > tall enough that it doesn't drag on the tire or otherwise get in the
> > way...
>
> As someone with *no* experience with these types of saddle bags, I've no
> clue what would be tall enough. I'm 1.8 m (5'10") tall and ride a
> pretty generic 57 cm frame. Tall enough?
>
> \\paul

Off hand, yes. I'm off the same height and ride a similarly spec'ed
frame with a Carradice Longflap. There are smaller saddlebags
available, e.g., Cadet, if it's a concern.

Browse the wallbike.com website, it displays photos of installed bags
along with relevant specs.

http://www.wallbike.com/carradice/longflaps.html


 
Date: 18 Sep 2007 20:32:05
From: vey
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
cjcrawford@idcomm.com wrote:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris
>

Move to Florida.


  
Date: 18 Sep 2007 20:18:52
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
> cjcrawford@idcomm.com wrote:
>> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
>> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
>> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
>> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
>> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
>> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.

vey wrote:
> Move to Florida.

Gene says ya gotta have a dayglo jacket there anyway
--
Andrew Muzi
www.yellowjersey.org
Open every day since 1 April, 1971


   
Date: 18 Sep 2007 21:46:24
From: vey
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
A Muzi wrote:

>
> Gene says ya gotta have a dayglo jacket there anyway

Gene is correct. Otherwise they mow you down (or so my wife tells me).


 
Date: 19 Sep 2007 00:27:26
From: sally
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
"cjcrawford@idcomm.com" <cjcrawford@idcomm.com > wrote in
news:1190156860.902060.183200@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat?

Pearl Izumi Optik jacket rolls up into half the size of a jersey pocket.
Castelli and Assos have similar products; maybe others. These jackets are
not insulated or super waterproof, but they do the job in many situations.


 
Date: 18 Sep 2007 23:32:23
From: Kristian M Zoerhoff
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On 2007-09-18, cjcrawford@idcomm.com <cjcrawford@idcomm.com > wrote:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat?

Have you considered a handlebar bag instead?

--

__o Kristian Zoerhoff
_'\(,_ kristian.zoerhoff@gmail.com
(_)/ (_)


 
Date: 18 Sep 2007 16:27:13
From: Hank Wirtz
Subject: Re: seat pack solution for winter coat, etc.?
On Sep 18, 4:07 pm, "cjcrawf...@idcomm.com" <cjcrawf...@idcomm.com >
wrote:
> Hi all - can anyone suggest a good solution for carrying a winter
> jacket and gloves under the seat? Here in CO it is often the case
> that you only want them on for descents and I hate carrying them
> stuffed in my jersey and I don't want to put a rack on. I've tried
> putting them in stuff sacks and then bungee cording them to my little
> seat pack but they never stay put and rub the legs.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris

Depends how thick your jacket is, but I've had good luck with one of
Specialized's larger expandable wedge packs. Enough room for my tube,
tools, and rain jacket. I can't see gloves being to big a problem to
get in there, too.

http://www.specialized.com/bc/SBCEqProduct.jsp?spid=25160