oldwheels
Legendary Member
- Location
- Isle of Mull
This shows my Brompton with mirror which when the bike was folded tucked in nicely without any adjustment.
I just ended up on the roof of the car. Fortunately the occupants were too embarrassed about being parked on a double yellow line to ask how I got there.I can vouch for how much that can hurt.
Why? Those buffers look as if they're on the right side already.What you time triallists need is a reverse version of these!
What you time triallists need is a reverse version of these!
View attachment 719260
Unless you wore them upside down. There must be a market for that type of thing, too, with people working on jobs over their heads.
Perhaps there would be more danger from others losing control and colliding with you while laughing hysterically than there actually would be from yourselves with your head down, running into things.
The reverse of these exist already. They are called Belayers glasses. Climbers use them
View attachment 719284
The reverse of these exist already. They are called Belayers glasses. Climbers use them
View attachment 719284

I have a Zefal Spy mirror on the end of drop bars. They are very small, but fairly convex, so the positioning is not too critical. They stay in place very well and are well insulated from road vibrations, so the view is good. It's just a secure band around the bar and I have one mirror and two bikes, so I remove it as a matter of course after every ride, which takes 1-2 seconds to remove and 3-4 to replace and adjust.
Another happy Zefal spy user here. I miss it when I forget to transfer it between bikes.
I finally got my CAADX back on the road so I needed an extra mirror. I just ordered a Zefal Spy for that.When I eventually kill off/lose the last of my current mirrors I will give the Spy a go.
I finally got my CAADX back on the road so I needed an extra mirror. I just ordered a Zefal Spy for that.
Why not just treat yourself to another one for the second bike?Hope it gives satisfaction. I really miss it if I forget to switch it between bikes.
Why not just treat yourself to another one for the second bike?
This. Or, even better, a glasses mirror. There are several reasons for having the mirror there. It gives a wider view than a handlebar mirror, especially as you can turn your head to pan, and your own arm and body don't block the necessary view; it doesn't have the vibration problem of a handlebar mirror, and you don't have to look down to see it. It doesn't shift around as much as your helmet (which would be my second choice for where to mount a mirror). The way I mount them, there's no way an accident could drive it into my eye; but of course the whole reason it's there is to prevent the accident anyway! It does take some learning, as everything seems backwards, like that you turn your head left to see more to the right, and so on; but once you learn, you'll never want to be without it again.I tried a bar end mirror with drops, during recovery from broken collarbone. Wasn't able to turn my head easily for a while. It helped, but discarded it when fully recovered.
One of my work colleagues used a helmet mirror and really recommended one.