I've seen these. Great idea, but Pitlock's brand is a bit expensive.
Found these on Amazon for a fraction of the Pitlock cost. Looks like they'd do just as good a job.
Great link. Looking a little further it appears that there are numerous vendors on Amazon that sells these locks in various combos (QR skewers, seat posts, etc.)
Question: Are the keys unique by indivudual lock or by brand? In other words, if I have a pitlock skewer and key, can I open all pitlock skewers, or just my own?
Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:I've seen these. Great idea, but Pitlock's brand is a bit expensive.
Found these on Amazon for a fraction of the Pitlock cost. Looks like they'd do just as good a job.
When I've ridden a bike with quick release skewers I've used small hose clamps from the hardware store to keep the thieves at bay. Never lost a wheel and they cost about 20 cents a piece.
im missing something here...how?
Chicago Bicycle Advocate said:When I've ridden a bike with quick release skewers I've used small hose clamps from the hardware store to keep the thieves at bay. Never lost a wheel and they cost about 20 cents a piece.
You put the hose clamp around the fork blade, and around the quick release skewer lever. Or around the seat stay and quick release lever. If you can't release the lever, you can't get the wheel off. Basically doesn't make it theft proof, but you'd have to loosen the clamp and slide it off before you'd be able to release the skewer. I've seen that a lot.
iggi said:im missing something here...how?
Chicago Bicycle Advocate said:When I've ridden a bike with quick release skewers I've used small hose clamps from the hardware store to keep the thieves at bay. Never lost a wheel and they cost about 20 cents a piece.
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