A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
about buying one and using it with your bike.
Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a third
party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last Christmas, I
started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found one at Marware:
<http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page: "IMPORTANT
NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE CASES ONLY."
But it sure looked like the case I had would work with the Marware bike
holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed in on my bike, and
tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in and seemed to be secure.
Then I took my first ride with it.
I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of the
bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway. When my
front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod shot right
out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow motion then. It
was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod slowly arced upward
directly toward the rail on the side of the bridge. I just knew it was
going over the rail and into the drink. Instead, it hit one of the steel
supports under the rail with a loud KA-THONG, bounced back on to the
bridge, and rolled for a few feet. I picked it up, and it was still
playing, no worse for wear. I stuck it in my saddlebag and finished my
ride.
When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
page and ordered one of their cases:
<http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike holder.
The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and seemed to
be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately, low traffic
road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right out of the bike
holder and landed in the middle of the road. I retrieved it quickly,
and it was still playing. Those little suckers are tough.
When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the case
an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it up, and
put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the front end of
the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've been riding with
it for a month or so like that, and have not had any problems with the
iPod even coming loose from the bike holder, much less popping out.
Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same mistakes
that I did and almost losing an iPod.
why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
are you?
[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
K-Man wrote:
:: A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
:: about buying one and using it with your bike.
::
:: Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a
:: third party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last
:: Christmas, I started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found
:: one at Marware:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
::
:: Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page:
:: "IMPORTANT NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE
:: CASES ONLY." But it sure looked like the case I had would work with
:: the Marware bike holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed
:: in on my bike, and tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in
:: and seemed to be secure. Then I took my first ride with it.
::
:: I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of
:: the bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway.
:: When my front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod
:: shot right out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow
:: motion then. It was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod
:: slowly arced upward directly toward the rail on the side of the
:: bridge. I just knew it was going over the rail and into the drink.
:: Instead, it hit one of the steel supports under the rail with a loud
:: KA-THONG, bounced back on to the bridge, and rolled for a few feet.
:: I picked it up, and it was still playing, no worse for wear. I stuck
:: it in my saddlebag and finished my ride.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
:: page and ordered one of their cases:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
::
:: Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike
:: holder. The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and
:: seemed to be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately,
:: low traffic road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right
:: out of the bike holder and landed in the middle of the road. I
:: retrieved it quickly, and it was still playing. Those little suckers
:: are tough.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
:: saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
:: clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the
:: case an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it
:: up, and put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the
:: front end of the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've
:: been riding with it for a month or so like that, and have not had
:: any problems with the iPod even coming loose from the bike holder,
:: much less popping out.
::
:: Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same
:: mistakes that I did and almost losing an iPod.
::
:: Ken
why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
are you?
[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
K-Man wrote:
:: A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
:: about buying one and using it with your bike.
::
:: Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a
:: third party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last
:: Christmas, I started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found
:: one at Marware:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
::
:: Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page:
:: "IMPORTANT NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE
:: CASES ONLY." But it sure looked like the case I had would work with
:: the Marware bike holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed
:: in on my bike, and tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in
:: and seemed to be secure. Then I took my first ride with it.
::
:: I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of
:: the bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway.
:: When my front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod
:: shot right out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow
:: motion then. It was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod
:: slowly arced upward directly toward the rail on the side of the
:: bridge. I just knew it was going over the rail and into the drink.
:: Instead, it hit one of the steel supports under the rail with a loud
:: KA-THONG, bounced back on to the bridge, and rolled for a few feet.
:: I picked it up, and it was still playing, no worse for wear. I stuck
:: it in my saddlebag and finished my ride.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
:: page and ordered one of their cases:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
::
:: Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike
:: holder. The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and
:: seemed to be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately,
:: low traffic road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right
:: out of the bike holder and landed in the middle of the road. I
:: retrieved it quickly, and it was still playing. Those little suckers
:: are tough.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
:: saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
:: clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the
:: case an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it
:: up, and put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the
:: front end of the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've
:: been riding with it for a month or so like that, and have not had
:: any problems with the iPod even coming loose from the bike holder,
:: much less popping out.
::
:: Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same
:: mistakes that I did and almost losing an iPod.
::
:: Ken
why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
are you?
[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
K-Man wrote:
:: A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
:: about buying one and using it with your bike.
::
:: Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a
:: third party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last
:: Christmas, I started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found
:: one at Marware:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
::
:: Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page:
:: "IMPORTANT NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE
:: CASES ONLY." But it sure looked like the case I had would work with
:: the Marware bike holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed
:: in on my bike, and tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in
:: and seemed to be secure. Then I took my first ride with it.
::
:: I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of
:: the bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway.
:: When my front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod
:: shot right out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow
:: motion then. It was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod
:: slowly arced upward directly toward the rail on the side of the
:: bridge. I just knew it was going over the rail and into the drink.
:: Instead, it hit one of the steel supports under the rail with a loud
:: KA-THONG, bounced back on to the bridge, and rolled for a few feet.
:: I picked it up, and it was still playing, no worse for wear. I stuck
:: it in my saddlebag and finished my ride.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
:: page and ordered one of their cases:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
::
:: Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike
:: holder. The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and
:: seemed to be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately,
:: low traffic road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right
:: out of the bike holder and landed in the middle of the road. I
:: retrieved it quickly, and it was still playing. Those little suckers
:: are tough.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
:: saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
:: clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the
:: case an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it
:: up, and put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the
:: front end of the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've
:: been riding with it for a month or so like that, and have not had
:: any problems with the iPod even coming loose from the bike holder,
:: much less popping out.
::
:: Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same
:: mistakes that I did and almost losing an iPod.
::
:: Ken
why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
are you?
[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
K-Man wrote:
:: A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
:: about buying one and using it with your bike.
::
:: Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a
:: third party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last
:: Christmas, I started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found
:: one at Marware:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
::
:: Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page:
:: "IMPORTANT NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE
:: CASES ONLY." But it sure looked like the case I had would work with
:: the Marware bike holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed
:: in on my bike, and tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in
:: and seemed to be secure. Then I took my first ride with it.
::
:: I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of
:: the bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway.
:: When my front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod
:: shot right out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow
:: motion then. It was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod
:: slowly arced upward directly toward the rail on the side of the
:: bridge. I just knew it was going over the rail and into the drink.
:: Instead, it hit one of the steel supports under the rail with a loud
:: KA-THONG, bounced back on to the bridge, and rolled for a few feet.
:: I picked it up, and it was still playing, no worse for wear. I stuck
:: it in my saddlebag and finished my ride.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
:: page and ordered one of their cases:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
::
:: Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike
:: holder. The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and
:: seemed to be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately,
:: low traffic road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right
:: out of the bike holder and landed in the middle of the road. I
:: retrieved it quickly, and it was still playing. Those little suckers
:: are tough.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
:: saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
:: clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the
:: case an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it
:: up, and put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the
:: front end of the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've
:: been riding with it for a month or so like that, and have not had
:: any problems with the iPod even coming loose from the bike holder,
:: much less popping out.
::
:: Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same
:: mistakes that I did and almost losing an iPod.
::
:: Ken
why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
are you?
[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
K-Man wrote:
:: A cautionary tale for those of you who have and iPod or are thinking
:: about buying one and using it with your bike.
::
:: Back when I first got my iPod a couple of years ago, I purchased a
:: third party case with a belt clip. When I got my bike last
:: Christmas, I started looking for iPod mounts for bikes, and found
:: one at Marware:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/ClipAccessories.html>
::
:: Yes, I saw the notice in red letters at the top of the page:
:: "IMPORTANT NOTE: THESE ACCESSORIES ARE DESIGNED FOR USE WITH MARWARE
:: CASES ONLY." But it sure looked like the case I had would work with
:: the Marware bike holder, so I ordered one. I received it, installed
:: in on my bike, and tried it with my iPod case. It slipped right in
:: and seemed to be secure. Then I took my first ride with it.
::
:: I was on our Greenway and was just getting ready to go over one of
:: the bridges that spans a creek that runs along most of the greenway.
:: When my front tire hit the bump at the edge of the bridge, my iPod
:: shot right out of the bike holder. Things started moving in slow
:: motion then. It was like time slowed to 1/20th speed. The iPod
:: slowly arced upward directly toward the rail on the side of the
:: bridge. I just knew it was going over the rail and into the drink.
:: Instead, it hit one of the steel supports under the rail with a loud
:: KA-THONG, bounced back on to the bridge, and rolled for a few feet.
:: I picked it up, and it was still playing, no worse for wear. I stuck
:: it in my saddlebag and finished my ride.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I immediately went back to the Marware
:: page and ordered one of their cases:
::
:: <http://www.marware.com/BASIC.html>
::
:: Now I had a case that was supposed to work with the Marware bike
:: holder. The case snapped into the holder with a reassuring click and
:: seemed to be secure. While I was riding that day on a, fortunately,
:: low traffic road, and hit a bump, and the iPod again jumped right
:: out of the bike holder and landed in the middle of the road. I
:: retrieved it quickly, and it was still playing. Those little suckers
:: are tough.
::
:: When I got back to my office, I examined the bike holder and case and
:: saw what the problem was. The bike holder holds the case via a spring
:: clip, and a good vertical jar will make the clip open, giving the
:: case an opportunity to slide out. I took a rubber band, doubled it
:: up, and put it around the iPod and the bike holder. I bounced the
:: front end of the bike up and down, and couldn't jar it loose. I've
:: been riding with it for a month or so like that, and have not had
:: any problems with the iPod even coming loose from the bike holder,
:: much less popping out.
::
:: Hope my experience helps prevent someone from making the same
:: mistakes that I did and almost losing an iPod.
::
:: Ken
In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
"Roger Zoul" <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]> wrote:
> why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
> position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
> come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
> be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
> are you?
I tried the armband and a waist belt and just didn't like either one.
They were both uncomfortable to me. I like having the iPod on the
handlebars so I can see the display. I use it as a timer sometimes, and
it's easier to glance down at it than it is to take one hand off the
handlebars to look at my watch.
In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
"Roger Zoul" <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]> wrote:
> why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
> position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
> come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
> be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
> are you?
I tried the armband and a waist belt and just didn't like either one.
They were both uncomfortable to me. I like having the iPod on the
handlebars so I can see the display. I use it as a timer sometimes, and
it's easier to glance down at it than it is to take one hand off the
handlebars to look at my watch.
In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
"Roger Zoul" <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]> wrote:
> why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
> position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
> come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
> be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
> are you?
I tried the armband and a waist belt and just didn't like either one.
They were both uncomfortable to me. I like having the iPod on the
handlebars so I can see the display. I use it as a timer sometimes, and
it's easier to glance down at it than it is to take one hand off the
handlebars to look at my watch.
In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
"Roger Zoul" <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]> wrote:
> why not just make several long playlists and get a waist belt....and
> position the ipod at your back instead of at your waist...it would never
> come loose from a waist belt...having your iPod on your handle bar shouldn't
> be necessary as you're not going ot be riding along while hunting for songs
> are you?
I tried the armband and a waist belt and just didn't like either one.
They were both uncomfortable to me. I like having the iPod on the
handlebars so I can see the display. I use it as a timer sometimes, and
it's easier to glance down at it than it is to take one hand off the
handlebars to look at my watch.