Has anyone tried to fit one of these to the front fork on a Nomad Mk II? Or has anyone done something similar to this?
There was a thread on these cages a few years ago at:
http://thorncyclesforum.co.uk/index.php?topic=10645.0But a quick search found very little else on this forum.
About half way down the page on this website they are discussed under the topic of cargo cages.
https://www.cyclingabout.com/cargo-cages-anything-cages-oversized-bottle-cages/I was thinking it might be nice to use such cages and something like a 5 liter drybag in a cage on each side instead of front racks and panniers to cut weight. Two 5 liter dry bags would of course have less than half the volume that my Ortlieb Frontrollers have, so this would be more for lighterweight tripping.
I would not use them for large water containers, only stuff packed in dry bags. Or if for some reason I changed my mind, I could see a 2 liter water bottle on each side using the soda pop bottles that are commonly sold in USA. But not more than two liters which is two kg.
I know that many of you have experience with water bottle cages for large water bottles. I am not interested in those cages, as I would prefer to strap drybags to the cage with straps instead of trying to pack a drybag so that it is perfectly shaped like a bottle cage.
Salsa Anything Cage.I was at a swap meet a couple weeks ago. Bought a used pair of first generation Salsa Anything Cages. Got a pair for $15 USD, which is about 25 percent of new price. The first generation ones had a bad reputation for breakage, maybe that is why I got them cheap.
The ones I have look like these:
http://salsacycles.com/culture/new_product_-_salsa_anything_cagesThey are designed for three bolts, but the upper and lower bolt holes are very close to the right distance apart to mount on the Nomad Mk II front fork upper rack mount and fender mount. I would have to do a bit of drilling on the cages, the holes are not quite where I would need them to be. Thus, I would mount them with two bolts, not three. I would not want to go to some far off place with these cages if there is a high probability one would break, so if I used them it would be more as an experiment on a short distance trip. Just thinking about it for now.
Blackburn Outpost Cargo Cages.At the same swap meet, I got a used pair of these for $20 USD, thus paid about 40 percent of the cost of new.
These are pretty robust and because they do not circle around a dry bag as much, if you crashed I think your drybag load would shift on the cage more, making it less likely that the cage would break.
More detail on them here:
https://www.blackburndesign.com/cages/outpost-cargo-cage.htmlThese are used where you have two water bottle cage bolts, not three. I was thinking I could use the upper Nomad fork rack bolt for the upper position on the cage and then use a P clip to hold the bottom of the cage against the fork. That would put most of the stress on only the upper bolt hole on the cage so I would likely back that up with fender washers to reinforce the cage better.
When I say P clip, I mean something like this to hold the bottom of the cage to the fork.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Gardner-Bender-1-in-Rubber-Insulated-Metal-Clamp-1-Pack-67795/100160272Options.I think the Blackburn option is less likely to break. But if I tried the Salsa one and it worked nicely on a trip, I would be inclined to buy the new ones that do not have the reputation for breakage and use those. I already own both, so it is not an issue of trying to decide which to buy.
Since the upper Nomad fork rack mount is quite robust (it will hold the weight of a loaded rack with an M6 bolt), I am confident that any breakage would be on the cages, not damaging the Nomad. And if I broke a cheap cage, although I would be unhappy it would not be a catastrophe like damaging a fork would be.
My plan would not be to use it for large water containers, more likely dry bags with camping gear, perhaps a tent on one side (roughly 2kg) and something comparable in another dry bag on the other side.
I have some 5 liter drybags, they appear to be about the right size for either cage. My 8 liter drybag was a bit too big. So, I think 5 liters is about all that I would want to try in one of these.
I have no trips planned at this time where I would use one of these, so this is a project for the future. I have not really thought about trying these on my Sherpa, I am more inclined to try it on my Nomad. But the Sherpa also might be an option.
If I try it, I will report back, but don't expect to hear back on this quickly.
If any of you have advice on this topic I would love to hear it.