RE: Rain Flap Tip

Hormann, Douglas J.

2006-01-23



You do, but the tools are relatively cheap and come in handy in a

million ways when doing things around the house or with bikes. Being a

true tool geek, I also have safety wire pliers and several gauges of

wire, but that is just demonstrating my abject hopelessness as a tool

geek.



The great thing about pop rivets is that they are lighter than bolts,

yet won't come undone. To remove them you just drill out the center

"mandrel" and out it comes. They come in several diameters and in steel

or aluminum for different uses.



Doug (The Tool Man) Hormann





-----Original Message-----

From: Schreck, George [mailto:George.-@PacifiCorp.com]

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 11:15 AM

To: Hormann, Douglas J.

Subject: RE: [OBRA Chat] Rain Flap Tip



Do you need a special tool to secure the rivets?   



-----Original Message-----

From: Hormann, Douglas J. [mailto:Douglas.-@tvfr.com]

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 11:11 AM

To: ob-@topica.com

Subject: RE: [OBRA Chat] Rain Flap Tip



I use pop rivets. Drill a small hole in the fender; only took me two

minutes to find the drill and bit, but maybe I'm particularly speedy:)

For plastic and the rubber my flap is made out of I used a couple small

washers and a longer aluminum pop rivet.



Dep. Doug Hormann, WCSO

Office of Consolidated Emergency Management

20665 SW Blanton Street, Aloha, OR 97007

503.642.0374 - Work

503.807.7485 - Mobile/Pager

112*30326*128 - Nextel DC

do-@ocem.org

http://www.ocem.org





-----Original Message-----

From: Evan MacKenzie [mailto:eva-@ci.hillsboro.or.us]

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 11:07 AM

To: ob-@topica.com

Subject: FW: [OBRA Chat] Rain Flap Tip



I dunno, I mean if it takes someone 15-30 minutes to drill a hole in a

piece of plastic and install a bolt, you really are in over your head.



Rear racks take at least four bolts, that's two hours!



What about regular maintenance on your bike?



I mean, it would be an hour before they even have the derailleurs

loosened and tightened again, even more to mess with the barrel

adjusters and actually get it to shift.



I don't even want to know how long it would take someone to remove a

crank (two bolts), take out the bb, put in a new one, and put the crank

back on with new chainrings (egads, five more bolts to remove and

reinstall!).



Better not have that person do a full tune-up on your bike, or you may

never see it again!



Now what were we talking about?



Oh yeah, but seriously folks, I don't care how you mount your fenders. I

just don't want to ride behind you on a winter training ride unless you

have a full fender in back and something attached below it. It'ths

justht bad rider etiquette (blech, gak!).



-Evan





------------- __o

---------- _ '\<,_

----------(_)/ (_)______Get on your bikes and ride!





-----Original Message-----

From: matt-@oatmail.org [mailto:matt-@oatmail.org]

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 10:53 AM

To: twotireti-@yahoo.com

Cc: Evan MacKenzie; ob-@topica.com

Subject: RE: [OBRA Chat] Rain Flap Tip



Pfftt. I saw a guy out yesterday with fenders entirely made out of

Orange

Juice Box containers.



Seriously, how complicated does this need to get? :P



 Well my tip is for people who do not want to deal with the hassle of

bolting since:



   Now you're looking at 15 minutes to half hour to install using a

bolt

 versus less than just a couple minutes.



   Now you are looking at more weight equals higher chance of fender

breaking and vibrating.



   Milk jug plastic is extremely flexible and tough and cheap and

readily

 available.   There is no need to twist it up for placing on rack. It

will flex. You want the weak part to be the flap not your fender !

A

 plastic tied flap is typically on much more securely then with a bolt,

(the "joint" is spread out versus concentrated forces..unless you use

curved fender washers with the bolt method or fabricated sheet metal

"washer" which only add more weight to vibrate and more fabrication

time, yes I know by experience... )

   And if the flap really gets in the way, well snip the ties and take

off

 the flap, and reinstall later. plastic tie are cheap.



   But I also ride my bike and rarely give my bicycle a ride.

especially in

 the winter.



   I've mounted a whole fender with plastic ties (well except for the

steel

 rods from the eyelets of course) by stratagically drilling holes and

combining the plastic ties..



   And then if you get the real big plastic ties they make good

handcuffs

 too.



   Actually my ski rack rack is held on to the roof of my car right now

with plastic ties...



   John









Evan MacKenzie <eva-@ci.hillsboro.or.us> wrote:

   All sounds good except...



I prefer to actually bolt mine to the existing fender. This allows the

attached piece, be it half an old water bottle or whatever, to rotate.

That way you can twist it up. If your fender extension on the front

fender does not rotate, forget putting the bike on pretty much any

fork

 mount roof rack with a tray to the rear wheel.



Evan





------------- __o

---------- _ '\<,_

----------(_)/ (_)______Get on your bikes and ride!





-----Original Message-----

From: john schmidt [mailto:twotireti-@yahoo.com]

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 9:59 AM

To: ob-@topica.com

Subject: [OBRA Chat] Rain Flap Tip



I thought I would share



putting those rain flaps the bottom of back fender is is nice for

group

 riding and the flap in the front keeps feet dryer and your chain much

much cleaner.



I found the easiest way to mount flaps is to just drill a couple holes

and "stitch" on the flaps with plastic ties. (this shouldn't take you

more than 5 minutes)



1. Find an old milk jug or similar plastic (you want light weight).

2. Cut out a strip (you can always trim later..)

3. Tape to fender (to hold in place for drilling)

4. Drill two vertically aligned holes about 1/2" apart on each "side"

of the fenders. four holes total. ( 1/8" or larger drill?) Remove the



wheel so you don't accidently drill into your tire !!!

5. run Plastic ties through the holes... Wire could work too,

basically you are just stitching the flap to the fender.



The concavity of the fender will "stiffen" the flap. But I've found

even

 

if it doesn't it still works just fine if long enough. you can also

drill holes down the length of the flap and run a wire through and

down

 

or double up the plastic. You want these things almost all the way to

the ground.



I found in general, plastic ties can be used all over the place to

hold

 fenders on, to hold lights on, etc etc.



yeah i did a goup ride these weekend and came home with so much sand

and

 

grit in my clothes that I made a sandbox. I was the only person with

decent flaps.



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To respond to the whole group send to ob-@topica.com.

To respond to the list manager send to cmur-@obra.org

To unsubscribe send to obra-uns-@topica.com



To respond to the whole group send to ob-@topica.com.

To respond to the list manager send to cmur-@obra.org

To unsubscribe send to obra-uns-@topica.com













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