Hi all,
Given that it is the middle of summer and the nights are light, it seemed an ideal time to consider pedal reflectors ready for winter.
I have always considered that pedal reflectors are a nuisance, but are really quite effective at identifying you as a cycle / cyclist.
However I have been a commited SPD clipless pedal user for years.
And I am aware of the various plastic SPD inserts that allow reflectors to be fitted to SPD pedals to make them notionally compliant with various local pedal-cycle laws / regulations. But I wondered if I could come up with a cheap alternative.
Requirements:
a) Fit onto the reverse ("underside"?) side of a double-sided SPD pedal.
b) Make the pedal naturally rotate round to make the usable clip side face upwards
c) Also work on recumbent trike where the front and rear of the pedals face sky-wards and ground-wards
Hence the following daft project:
1) Take a length of scrap 15mm x 15mm box-section tubing, some yellow "diamond-grade" reflective tape and a pair of SPD cleats
2) Cut 2 pieces of the tube to be 55mm long where 55mm was the width of the reflective tape and was also the ideal length to match the width of the pedals
3) Drill one side of each tube to accept the two 5mm cleat bolts
4) Wrap tubes in reflective tape (and re-cut the bolt-holes)
5) Attach cleats to tubes
6) Attach result to one side of each pedal
Because the tube is wrapped on all four sides the "underside" faces forwards on a recumbent (when in-use of course)
Hmm, ok, should the underside have been covered in *white* reflective tape for recumbent use?
Or must the only "moving" (relative to the bicycle) reflectors on a bicycle be *yellow*?