Last Sunday morning I dropped my phone at a cyclocross race, and didn't realize that I'd lost it until headed home. As the temperature was -30F with windchill at the time, I thought it better to simply write it off and get another. This will be my fourth phone this year -- all three having died bicycle-related deaths. The first met its end while on a 5 hour ride during one of the summer's worst thunderstorms. (Remember the tornado warnings? Yeah... I was stuck out in Willow Springs with my teammates, scared out of our wits and soaked to the bone.) The second one decided to stop working after it was ejected from my jersey pocket and slid across the street. Of course, it had already been dropped a dozen times or more... and of course the third one is now encased in ice somewhere in Jackson Park. In previous years, I have stepped on phones, dropped them into buckets of degreaser, and just plain misplaced them.
So what do you all use?
I realize that the prudent probably responsibly and carefully store their phones in waterproof bags, or at least in ziplocks. But the latter doesn't help much when dropped. How do you keep your phone running through the rain and snow? And for those of you who are as clumsy as I am, what do you do about dropped (and dirty) phones?
One strategy is to simply use very inexpensive models, which is what I tend to do. (I don't need it to do anything other than make and receive calls.) Some have suggested one of those military grade phones, like the
Casio gzone. It might come to that, I dunno. Do these ruggedized phones really work?
I wouldn't really worry about this too much, except that on many of my rides I'm technically responsible for the welfare of my teammates. And from time to time, an emergency call is warranted. So no phone isn't an option.