I tried that in the past, but the zipties always broke after a while. Alike the plastic became brittle. Maybe all that I tried were not suitable for the conditions, and better ones out there, don't know.I have zip tied to the chainstay bridge. Drill two v small holes down centreline about 1cm apart. Loop a small ziptie through. Lasts at least 10 years, rattle free .
Some cable ties are more uv resistant, others are for indoor use or biodegradable.I tried that in the past, but the zipties always broke after a while. Alike the plastic became brittle. Maybe all that I tried were not suitable for the conditions, and better ones out there, don't know.
After that I started using washing line - plastic with a stiff steel core. I drill two holes, bend it in a U, insert it, then bend the U again open (or close, depending on avail space, preferrably towards a direction that water doesn't get between steel core and insulation (rust).
Benefit is that you can bend the U again open, to remove things to work on the bike, and reuse it.
I must have just got lucky with an indestructible batch.Some cable ties are more uv resistant, others are for indoor use or biodegradable.
Yes, lve done that on two of my other bikes and as you say, its a great fix.
But on the Ti frame, the brake bridge is a odd shape and also tapered, which means its that that easy to apply the cable tie fix. The gap between the bridge and the mudguard is the problem, which is really annouying to be honest!
cut the fender at that point. raise it. use 2 elbow brackets, 1 for each half. it's not pretty but it works. if I have time I'll dig up pics of how I've done it on a cpl bikes. but like I said, it's not pretty. EDIT - I think so far I only found front fork crown pics, but the same applies in the rear
There doesn't seem to be any reason for the brake bridge to be such an annoying shape.
I can totally understand why you'd not want to do this, but if it was mine, i'd grind that pointy bit off the brake bridge to make it a more appropriate shape. Extra clearance too!