Riding in icy conditions
Riding in icy conditions
Author
Discussion

funkyrobot

Original Poster:

18,789 posts

254 months

Saturday 3rd February 2018
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I bought myself a Raleigh Mustang Sport the other month. Been meaning to get out on it and now I have some time, the weather is getting icy.

What's the opinion of experienced folk on here about riding in icy and very cold conditions. Just avoid or go out but take it steady?

The bike is a 'gravel' bike so the tyres are a bit wider than the usual road bike stuff. They only inflate to 60 psi too.

Ok to ride or dust off the turbo and stay in the garage?

Oh yes, I have spd pedals which are spd one side and flat pedal the other. Could just use the flat side.

anonymous-user

80 months

Saturday 3rd February 2018
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Personally, I don't risk it. I ride in nearly all conditions but just won't take the chance in snowy or icy weather.

If I have to then I take it very easily and run much lower PSI.

anonymous-user

80 months

Saturday 3rd February 2018
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Take it steady

Matt_N

9,008 posts

228 months

Saturday 3rd February 2018
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I came off on ice and broke my femur just over 3 years ago, not a nice experience.

I won't go out if there's clearly ice on the roads or paths but do brave it, gingerly, when it's frosty.

This week coming will be interesting, some low temps forecast again.

b2hbm

1,301 posts

248 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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I'd dust off the turbo if there's ice on the roads because it doesn't matter what tyres or pressures you run, if you hit black ice on a corner you're coming off. Obviously you'll do less damage if you're riding slowly, but riding slowly isn't going to give you much of a workout or training benefit, is it ? You might as well have an hour on the turbo instead.

I won't normally ride with snow on the roads either, although on a mountain bike with a decent set of tyres and some care it's an option. Off road in snow is fine, it even cuts down on the amount of mud you pick up wink

df76

4,180 posts

304 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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As above, don't do it. I've tried it and massively regretted it each time. Has resulted in my worst "near misses" including a van wing mirror clipping me whilst stationary on the verge. Can only assume that he hadn't cleaned his screen properly and was blinded by the low sun. It's not just the ice on the ground.

funkyrobot

Original Poster:

18,789 posts

254 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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Thanks all.

I'll stick to the turbo. smile

frisbee

5,535 posts

136 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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I commute in all weather so I'll ride in snow and ice. I'll switch to the mountain bike and take things easy if its icy.

Its fairly rare to be both wet and cold in this country though.

Slammedorion

380 posts

144 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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Just think ahead and do things slower
Higher gears, gentle on the brakes ( very gentle on the front brake if needed ), steer slower

Same as in the car...

Jimbo.

4,193 posts

215 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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If you MUST go it when it’s icy* then keep the route flat AF, start as late in the day as you can, stick to busier (gritted) roads and ride roads you know get plenty of sun. Stay out the shadows, ride VERY easy and hope for the best.

(*) or keep to the turbo/MTB. Risk elimination and all that smile

BenGismo

299 posts

194 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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frisbee said:
I commute in all weather so I'll ride in snow and ice. I'll switch to the mountain bike and take things easy if its icy.

Its fairly rare to be both wet and cold in this country though.
Same here. I've bike commuted all winter (Mon-Fri twice a day) Cant say I have had a problem - If anything my bike handling is much better then it used to be and I now know what roads/areas/spots get most slippy. The snow and rain aren't bad really (you still get some traction with those and can ride to the conditions). Its the black ice that I find REALLY difficult (its hard to see it and practically has NO grip at all). So I go at half pace when theres been rain overnight and its less then 2C....

Its not bad at all... as long as you have the right clothing and decent winter tyres.


Edited by BenGismo on Sunday 4th February 16:31

ReverendCounter

6,087 posts

202 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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Fresh snow can be hard work. If you have to ride over ice/icy ground, try not to turn suddenly and try to plan your direction changes in advance - understeer (possibly leading to an off) will be frequent otherwise.

I've had wheelspin on knobblies when climbing ungritted frosty/icy lanes but that was easier to deal with than understeer on the flat from ice.

Banana Boy

467 posts

139 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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BenGismo said:
frisbee said:
I commute in all weather so I'll ride in snow and ice. I'll switch to the mountain bike and take things easy if its icy.

Its fairly rare to be both wet and cold in this country though.
Same here. I've bike commuted all winter (Mon-Fri twice a day) Cant say I have had a problem - If anything my bike handling is much better then it used to be and I now know what roads/areas/spots get most slippy. The snow and rain aren't bad really (you still get some traction with those and can ride to the conditions). Its the black ice that I find REALLY difficult (its hard to see it and practically has NO grip at all). So I go at half pace when theres been rain overnight and its less then 2C....

Its not bad at all... as long as you have the right clothing and decent winter tyres.


Edited by BenGismo on Sunday 4th February 16:31
Another one here who commutes by bike all year round - I also use my MTB if it's snowy/icy although weekend rides are out if it's sub-zero... it's not worth the risk on a group ride!

anonymous-user

80 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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Bottled out today due to ice - but that might be partly due to crashing (again) on Tuesday

wattsm666

737 posts

291 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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I’d be using the gravel bike on gravel when icy.

gazza285

10,958 posts

234 months

Sunday 4th February 2018
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Put some ice tyres on would be my suggestion.

LeoSayer

7,731 posts

270 months

Monday 5th February 2018
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Falling off is one thing, getting wiped out by an out of control vehicle is another.


S100HP

13,678 posts

193 months

Monday 5th February 2018
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I had an incidence a few years back on black ice. I fell off which in itself wasn't much of an issue, but the car that locked up behind me and continued to slide towards me on the ice was. Managed to roll out the way up a curb but the bike got punted down the road into another car, cracking the forks. Proper wary of ice now.

WilliamWoollard

2,456 posts

219 months

Monday 5th February 2018
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Icy, no effing way. Cold, wrap up and crack on.

troc

4,065 posts

201 months

Monday 5th February 2018
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another ‘all-weather’ commuter here. If the snow is properly thick, then I’ll switch to the mountain bike. Otherwise, I stick to my purpose-built commuter bike and just take it carefully.

My commute is mostly car-free but there are some lovely off-camber bridge-related corners which collect slipperiness and thrust it at the unaware.