How
to Survive Road Hazards
By Fred Matheny and Ed Pavelka of
www.RoadBikeRider.com
Cycling is a unique sport because its arena is
the open road. That’s the same place frequented by traffic, potholes,
snarling dogs and absentminded pedestrians.
But sometimes we’re our own worst enemy.
Inattention and poor technique can put us on the pavement as fast as any
hazard. Use these tips and you’ll be less likely to take a tumble.
-
Always ride with your head up.
While cruising along, it’s tempting to stare at the whirling pattern of
the front spokes or fixate on your cyclecomputer’s numbers. A momentary
downward glance that lasts just a second too long can mean riding into a
problem that could easily have been avoided.
-
Focus. The smooth and rhythmic
motion of pedaling can have a hypnotic effect. Daydreaming cyclists have
crashed into the back of parked cars, wandered far into the traffic lane
or blithely ridden off the road. Don’t let yourself be separated from the
outside world by the vivid canvases created by your imagination. Keep your
head in the game.
-
Keep your bike in top mechanical
condition. Repair or replace faulty parts sooner rather than
later. It’s a loser’s game to milk “just one more ride” out of worn brake
pads, a frayed cable, or tires with a threadbare tread or bulging
sidewall. Your first line of defense against the challenges of the real
world is a bike with all parts in good working order.
Punctures
It’s every rider’s fate to flat. But it’s
relatively easy to limit the frequency.
-
Choose your line with care. The
best way to avoid punctures is also the easiest: Steer around broken
glass, road rubble and potholes.
-
Use tires with a Kevlar belt under the
tread. Kevlar does a good job of stopping nasty things from
penetrating. Inspect the tread after every ride for embedded debris.
Remember, most punctures are caused by something sticking to the tread and
working through during numerous wheel revolutions. Replace tires before
they become so thin that they’re virtually defenseless against pointy
things.
-
Check inflation pressure every couple of
days. Tubes are slightly porous and may lose several pounds of
pressure each day. Soft tires slow you down, corner poorly, wear fast, and
don’t protect your rims against metal-bending impacts.
Potholes
Hitting potholes can bend your rims beyond
repair. If the chasm is deep enough, it will send you hurtling over the
handlebar when you bury the front wheel and the bike suddenly stops. Here’s
a primer on pothole evasion.
-
Note where potholes lurk on your
normal training routes. Plan your line well in advance to avoid them.
Don’t expect the road to be in the same condition every day. Potholes have
a habit of sprouting up out of nowhere, especially in the winter and early
spring due to the daily freeze/thaw cycle.
-
Treat potholes like glass. Ride
around them, first checking behind for traffic. Be mindful of riding
partners when you change your line. Newly minted potholes present a
double hazard—the chasm itself, and the chunks of shattered pavement
around it. If the pothole doesn’t bend your wheel, the sharp bits of
rubble might puncture your tire. Give these highway craters a wide berth.
-
Jump your bike over a pothole,
if you have the skill and are unable to ride around it because of traffic
or adjacent riders. Learn this move on a grassy field. Level your pedals,
crouch off the saddle, then spring up and lift with your feet and hands.
Start by jumping over a line on the ground, then graduate to higher but
forgiving objects such as a rolled-up towel or a shoebox.
Railroad Tracks
Unlike most dangers, tracks can’t be ridden
around. You can suffer an instant crash if your tires slip on the shiny
steel rails. Ride with extreme caution and follow these safety tips.
-
Slow down! Tracks are rough, and
even if you don’t crash you could get a pinch flat. This happens when you
ride into something abrupt, like a rail, and it pinches the tube between
the tire and rim, slicing two little holes in the tube.
-
Rise slightly off the saddle.
Have equal weight on your hands and feet. Let the bike chatter beneath
you. Use your flexed arms and legs as shock absorbers.
-
Cross tracks at a right angle.
If the rails are diagonal to the road and you cross them at an angle, your
front wheel can be twisted out from under you. A perpendicular passage is
essential in the rain. Wet metal tracks are incredibly slippery. The
slightest imbalance or abrupt move can send you sprawling.
-
Jump if you’re real good. Racers
who need to cross tracks at maximum speed will jump them. They use the
same technique that works for potholes, but with more speed and lift
because they must clear two rails. Coming down too early means the rear
wheel will hit the second rail, guaranteeing a ruined rim or a pinch flat.
In most cases, jumping isn’t worth the danger. It’s better to slow down,
square up, and creep across.
Additional Slick Spots
-
Painted lines. These can be
slippery, especially the wide markings for pedestrian crossings at
intersections. The paint fills in the asphalt’s texture, producing a
surface that’s uncertain when dry and deadly when wet. The danger is worse
when the paint is new.
-
Dry oil
slicks. These may be nearly invisible, but you can spot them as
darker streaks on a gray pavement. Be real careful in corners. You aren’t
safe if you ride through oil on the straights. The greased tread might
slip in a corner just ahead.
-
Wet oil slicks. If it rains, a
small oily patch can grow until it covers the whole lane. Be on the
lookout for the telltale multi-colored water. There’s no pot of gold at
the end of this rainbow, only a black-and-blue meeting with the pavement.
-
Wet metal. If it’s been raining
and you come upon anything metal in the road (manhole cover,
steel-deck bridge, road-repair plate), it’s as treacherous as riding on
ice. Cross it with the bike absolutely upright. Even a slight lean can
cause the wheels to slip. Smart riders walk their bikes across wet steel
bridges.
-
Wet leaves. Be very
careful in the fall, or you will. Even if the road is dry, there can be
moisture trapped between leaves littering the pavement. When you see
leaves in a corner, slow down and round the bend with your bike upright,
not angled.
-
Sewer
grates.
Some old ones have bars that run parallel to the street and are wide
enough to let a bike wheel fall through. If this happens, you can look
forward to plastic surgery and possibly a lifetime of lawsuit riches. Many
municipalities have replaced such grates with bicycle-friendly versions,
but be careful in case a town hasn’t gotten the message yet.
|
|