There are a number of tricks and products to get tools out of your bag and onto your bike, ranging from duct tape hacks to refined "SWAT" products. SWAT stands for Storage, Water, Air and Tools, and it's trademarked, of course, by mountain biking's most prolific acronym factory, located in Morgan Hills, California. Specialized, however, are only one of a number a number of accessory makers and do-it-yourselfers inventing alternative storage methods to the ubiquitous hydration pack.
Why would you want to add weight to your bike rather than your back? Things tend to get lost at the bottom of your bag and often mince themselves into a paste with that rotten banana that's also lost under your muddy waterproof jacket. Attaching things to your bike can make life more organized and, if you decide to dump the pack for a quick ride, you will still have all the necessary things to get you out of mechanical troubles. Here's a selection of my favorite products and tips:
If duct-taping a tube to your carbon superbike isn't your thing, then this
DMR Stage1 saddle is a good solution - with a Velcro strap that is fixed between the seat rails. It's a quality made and comfortable seat, and it costs £49.99. For extra handiness, wrap the tube around a tire lever or two before attaching it to the saddle, so you always have levers ready exactly when you need them.
Sahmurai S.W.O.R.D The
Sahmurai Super Wicked Original Repair Device is a great way to solve all but the worst of tubeless tire issues out on the trail. This tire plug kit doubles as a set of bar end-plugs, so you avoid the risk of self-mutilation in the event of a crash. At only 40 grams and $35 USD, this covert kit won't break the bank or your bike's weight balance.
Tape and Ties
Keep your wallet in your cargo shorts. Here's our first free tip: Wrap a meter or so of duct tape around some zip ties on your pump, seat tube or wherever else may be suitable on your steed - for your time of need. It's a fact that 98-percent of trail mechanicals can be fixed with tape or zip ties.
Birzman Infinite Pump and CO2 ComboThis Infinite pump and CO2 combo from
Birzman use a sturdy bottle cage mount that can be fitted under a Specialized SWAT bottle cage and tool system (
see below). The stainless-steel, braided hose and simple Apogee dual-valve head can be used either with the pump or with threaded CO2 cartridges.
Master Link
Here's your second freebie, and I'm going to be honest here, I stole this idea from Jerome Clementz. It is an incredibly simple way to securely store a spare quick-link for that inevitable time, when you are miles from anywhere and the clock is ticking…
Specialized SWAT Bottle Cage This simple bottle cage from
Specialized is side loading for frames that are tight on space and can be purchased in right or left-handed options. The seven-function tool can also be used in conjunction with their SWAT chain breaker tool that doubles as a stem cap and fits inside a steerer tube.
Energy Gels This tip is an old cross-country racer's favorite. Tape the top of the sachet above the perforated tear line to your bike's top tube. When you get peckish, tear the sachet off and it will open itself – just don't be one of those people who discards the empty plastic on the trail.
Those are my favorites. Are there any products or tips that you have for moving storage off the back and onto the bike? Let us know in the comment section.
MENTIONS: @dmrbikes /
@Specialized
281 Comments
Now I'm gonna tape a couple pounds worth of crap to the frame.
#soenduro
#fasterthanyou
#whatwealldidinthenineties
#thankyoucamelbaknowpissoff
that way you can have a huge stash and a lot of fun
Here's a brilliant idea! I'm going to take everything out of my well organized backpack and randomly tape it all over my carbon bike
Riding without a pack is preferable, but my bike can only hold one water bottle and I need more than that. If I'm carrying a Camelbak anyway its way easier to just throw the rest inside with it.
I'll just wear a back pack like a regular person, thanks.[/quote]
I'm with you on this.
Road bike, OK, maybe if my jersey pockets are already stuffed...
On a mountain bike, sorry, a properly loaded pack that fits is a better way to carry that burden than strapping it to a bike that I have put effort and $$$'s into making it lighter. In the pack, it's well organized, clean and dry.
SWAT = a new way to separate you with your hard earned cash...
^ This
www.etsy.com/uk/listing/175222880/banana-holder-brown
What kind of chump just carries a £4 inner tube in their bag when they could have a £50 velcro'd to their saddle!
No way I'm skipping the Camelbak. It has literally saved me from serious, or at least, very significant and painful injury on numerous 'get-offs' in the past.
www.bicycling.com/training/health-injuries/pack-wisely-to-save-your-spine
Also, fanny pack ftw, it won't get you laid but f*ck it, you only roll up on dudes anyways. (And if you swing that way the other dudes on the trail will prolly dig it)
Joe Murray...american XC racing legend...and one of the first ex-racers to become product designer for a bike brand (Kona) gave us some nice tire designs, and THIS... the Joe Murray Combo cage...A combination of storage, water, And tools.
teamcow.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Fullscreen-capture-09122015-35147-PM.jpg
Then there's american inventor and mountain biking legend Robert L Seals and his Cool Tool, essentially the first purpose built multi-tool / compact monkey wrench for bicyclists, which many here likely remember, but lesser known was his Cool Tool Seatpost Quick Release.. A seatpost clamp QR that also doubles as a 10mm box wrench, 4-5-6mm allen wrenches, and 14/15 gauge spoke nipple wrenches.
www.ebay.ca/itm/Gerber-Cool-Tool-Quick-Release-QR-Bicycle-Tool-CLOSEOUT-/270378201607
The Club Roost wacky plug, from the same company that brought us the return of riser bars to mountain bikes, which was a simple rubber plug to let you stuff small tools, money, spare bolts, chain links, etc (up to 8 ounces total) inside the bottom of your seatpost, which btw is related to still having a quick release seatpost clamp, which allowed you to easily remove your post while out right. They of course, could also be stuck UNDER the fork crown to hold stuff inside the steerer tube.
www.pinkbike.com/photo/13605413
www.pinkbike.com/photo/13605415
As to combination minipumps and co2 inflators, which can be mounted under the bottle cage....ummm....that's not new either... Genuine Innovations, Beto', Topeak, Zefal and many others have been making them for many years now. Also related to quick releases... many levers are flattened and curving shapes (such as Salsa Flip Offs) to be both pleasant to the hand, but also to enable them to be used as tire levers. Tight spaces / cutouts on the back side of cassette cogs and around chainrings/crank arm spiders can be used as bottle cap openers for beer/pop bottles, as can the clip mechanism of shimano MTB and Look Road clipless pedals.
Its an absolute dream riding with out luggage don't get me wrong, but im all about minimal faff, just grab the pack and go. deal with it
backcountryresearch.com
If you bike has two water bottle holders, use one to carry a bottle with your essentials in it (tube, patch kit, multi tool,keys, cash and or credit card)
For one guy, it almost ended his weekend because we didn't have a wheel for him (he had a bolt-on rear wheel- everything we had was through-axle) and he had to spend extra money to rent a bike four days in a row.
I'm not saying I would literally stop trail side and tear down a wheel to replace spokes, but I also would highly recommend against waiting until you were down 5 spokes a wheel. $10 in spokes vs building/buying a new $200 wheel? I know what I'd choose.
But, my original point was, If your leaving home with all your spokes and you break one trail side, just pull it out so it doesn't give you a poke, keep riding, and fix it later. Unless your on some epic multi day remote trip you probably won't need spares.
You slice a side wall you need some type of boot and a tube.
On short rides I have a pump mounted to the bottle holders and a tube / tire lever / multi tool held with Velcro to my top tube
wear a bag.
www.sportsworld.co.za/img/p/1420-3721-thickbox.jpg
Perfect size for a multi tool, tire levers, a couple C02, some zip ties and a master link. Tape or strap a tube to your frame, throw on a fanny pack for water and off you go!
It costs about $10 per gram to lose weight on your bike these days...so why am I strapping shit back on the bike again? Get a good hydration pack that fits well and let your bike bob and weave without restrain like before enduro .
And take a big dump before every ride...the more you know!
www.freightbags.com/products/large-hip-pack
Enough to carry multitool, CO2, and a rain jacket and tube. Unless I'm in the high country, I don't need more.
I use a pack if i'm going for a ride, but an hours blast at night, strap on the £4 saddle pack, carrying a Tube, CO2, Tyre Lever and a 5+4mm allen wrench. Bottle in the cage and bingo! Enough to get you home.
And still, I will NEVER ride with zip ties taped to my seatpost. wtf?!
I have a backpack for that.
Water bottle, little one for under 10 mile rides (slow tech singletrack only), big bottle good to about 15 miles on a cooler day otherwise I bring a small pack. Big pack and bottles for the all day rides where I don't have access to clean refills.
Multi tool (get one that has a knife), der hanger, links, seat clamp nuts and bolts, spare SPD cleat and bolts, zip ties and some cash goes in a small ziploc bag that either goes in a pocket or the pack.
Light and mount (modified a Lumina 700 bar mount to fit a GoPro mount, helmet is a Bell with GoPro base attachment) can go either in a pocket or the pack.
2. Add kg of weight by storing stuff on your bike.
3. ???
4. Profit!
@paulaston EXPLAIN YOURSELF
www.pinkbike.com/u/notdannyhart/blog/how-to-make-a-co2-tap-mount.html
www.pinkbike.com/photo/13612035
On a lunch ride ive only had to walk back once because didnt have a pump or tube. But many times i wished i had a wrench to make a small adjustment or tighten a loose headset.
For a short ride i like to just pinch the tires and grab it and go. No pads no backpack no water.