Hi All!
I need to tap into your collective advice and wisdom on the matter of clipless shoes and pedals for touring. As a member of the
cyclistes anciens I have no experience with these, and need some advice and suggestions to better avoid a mistake.
Here's the deal...
My recent stint pushing the expedition-laden Nomad and trailer 11mi/18km up 13%+ grades in gravel and dirt while wearing my ancient Detto Pietro Article 74 cycling cleats has caused me to rethink a few things.
Nearly all my bikes are equipped with
really high-quality road quill pedals that are unlikely to wear out anytime soon. To use them, I must wear my old Detto Pietro racing cleats -- which also happen to be the rare cycling shoe that fits my narrow, flat feet (after padding them out with orthotics and such they still wrinkle some, but the fit is acceptable for riding). I have to have good isolation from the pedal 'cos I broke-down the fat sacs in my feet by riding too much in trainers early on in my cycling career.
Thinking about it, if I used my remaining pairs of Dettos and (no longer available) cleats with the pedals on my other bikes with the very limited walking I would expect, I can probably get another decade out of the lot -- at least. This would be great, 'cos equipping every bike with clipless pedals of similar quality would break the Banque du Danneaux if done all at once.
The plan, then, would be to equip the Nomad with SPD-pedals to match the limited walkability of MTB shoes for touring (as opposed to road racing shoes, which would me back where I am...having to carry spare shoes for limited walking else I damage the shoes/cleats). I'd simply change to my "Nomad shoes" when I wanted to ride it; everything else would stay the same. Yay.
So, this brings me to a couple questions.
First, shoes. I've tried on Men's MTB shoes and found myself swimming in them. The heel is too wide to stay socketed and the toe box is so wide and high, I run out of takeup before they're snug. I'm thinking of going for a masculine-looking pair of women's MTB cycling shoes to get the fit I need. I've sometimes had to do this with athletic trainers and it was a workable solution. Right now, the leading candidate is the Shimano WM51 (reviewed here:
http://www.rei.com/product/830715/shimano-wm51-mountain-bike-shoes-womens ) or possibly the Pearl Izumi All-Road II (
http://www.rei.com/product/853264/pearl-izumi-all-road-ii-bike-shoes-womens ). I'd like to spend no more than about USD$100 for the shoes, and wouldn't mind getting more expensive ones if they were about that price when on sale.
Has anyone here used either of these shoes? Can anyone suggest a narrow men's alternative at a similar price-point? Thoughts and ideas are welcome.
Second, pedals. Reviews I've read indicate small ones are more likely to result in hot spots and nerve pain than those with greater surface area, though I would imagine it depends on the shoes they're used with. I'd like shielded cartridge bearings and cro-mo spindles.
Jawine has already suggested eBay and with good reason; the prices I've seen there for new are roughly half the price of new online and about a third the price of new at local stores.
Black would be very nice aesthetically to maintain the Stealthy Nomad image, but I could live with silvery, I guess.
Several have caught my eye, including these well-reviewed ones:
• Shimano A520 SPD Sport Pedals, apparently single-side entry:
http://www.rei.com/product/724917/shimano-a520-spd-sport-pedals• Shimano M540 SPD Bike Pedals, double-entry, which seems a plus:
http://www.rei.com/product/705310/shimano-m540-spd-bike-pedals• Shimano M424 SPD Pedals, double-entry? These appear essentially the same as the M540, but with a larger surface area thanks to the plastic platform surround:
http://www.rei.com/product/752295/shimano-m424-spd-pedals• Shimano XT M785 SPD Mountain Bike Pedals, which look to be a higher quality version of the M424:
http://www.rei.com/product/826096/shimano-xt-m785-spd-mountain-bike-pedals• Some of the Crank Bros lower-end Candy pedals look nice, but there have been worrisome reports of spindle breakage and the occasional bad bearing.
So, that's where I am in my thinking at present. Any thoughts, suggestions, preferences or prejudices wrt to clipless touring pedals and shoes for skinny-footed male cyclists like myself?
Many thanks in advance to all!
Best,
Dan. (...who thinks fitting feet may be nothing compared to footing the bill)