Well it was global fatbike day today, so to celebrate a few of us went on a group ride through the city with our rigs. This was the first real chance I've had to ride snow as we've only had a decent amount for a week now, and let me tell ya it's some of the most fun I've ever had on a bike.
I've only got one pic of the group, the rest of the time we were riding we didn't even think to stop and snap some pictures.
I'm the goober on the far right with my super technical outerwear setup... Really though I was quite warm with just a baselayer and my insulated flannel on in -10C weather, which seemed to be perfect.
As far as the riding itself went we trekked through all parts of the city. Icy downtown streets, fields and hills of fresh snow (my city has a lot of greenspace) bike paths, really anything and everything a snowy city would have to offer. So the traction on a fatbike is really good for the most part.
If you start to get into deep snow things can get loose pretty quick, but I had so many moments where I had the bars super sideways and I thought I was going to lose the front end but managed to ride out just fine every time. The deepest snow we went through was probably 20cm where snow had drifted into some places and it was easy to get through that as long as you had some momentum going in.
Alternatively semi-packed snow offers the most traction I've ever felt on a bike. The big tires grab that stuff so well and it's one of the nicest feelings ever especially if you're climbing up and over something. I wasn't really expecting this at all and you could probably set some damn fast times on some single tracks if you had them prepared properly.
And my boot project. Basically I wanted to take a pair of my favorite winter footwear, insulated rubber boots and make them clipless. Pictures are better then words so I'll just let loose with them:
The boots.
The dream.
Vac bagging some carbon footbeds.
Carbon footbeds.
Hardware to get the cleat onto the footbed.
Taking a holesaw to the boots was terrifying. The position of this was quite critical. It needed to be offset to the inside of the sole so the boot would clear the crank arm. Then it needed to be in a spot where there would be enough tread to each side of the cleat so it could properly contact and push on the pedal.
Here's the hardware in the spacer. I used binding freedom inserts for the cleats to thread into as they're both M5 thread, then I tapped the nylon spacer for some M6 screws that will hold it onto the footbed. The M6 screw will get epoxied into the disk to lock them into place for good.
The hardware also needed to be cut flush and I just did that with an angle grinder.
After all that. boom we've got some sick footbeds.
Then I just stuffed those into the boot and taa-daa. I also had to slice away some rubber on the tread of the boot to create a channel for the pedal (which I still need to clean up with a grinder and a some sandpaper but it works for now)
And this is clipped in here, works as designed! The boot looks super off to one side because I had the pedals right dialed down for test fitting. I still haven't glued the footbeds in yet either so they can rotate slightly in the boot to.
All in all it's been a pretty fun little project. A few finishing touches, clean up the tread channel, add a cork liner to the footbed, glue the footbed in place, then figure out if I can seal around the hole, and they will be 100% done. They worked extremely well on the ride today. Weren't loose feeling at all, were easy to clip in and out, and were super warm. I'll probably ride these for a long time until my complaint list piles up, then I'll maybe build an even nicer set next summer, see if I can do something without boring through the boot's sole.