goatstick
Team SCDRR
Posts: 349
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I ran Power Grips on my trike for a couple of years. For me, they are to much trouble to get in and out of for a recumbent bike. I ran them on the trike to try to get around the problem with my broken feet and they did pretty well until I developed enough power using regular shoes that my arches started hurting. I dropped them when I figured out how to move the cleats back on some mtn bike shoes that had adequately rigid soles. I commuted pretty much every day for years on several different types of bikes and when you do that, you develop the understanding that your bike is a commodity, that you chew things up and they have to be replaced. It's an expense but a really cheap one compared to a motor vehicle. Pretty much *anything* that makes life substantially easier for commuting is most likely worth doing, and using clipless pedals was one of the most advantageous things I did, whether is was my road bike, the trike, a mtn bike or the recumbent bike. They make life far easier to do hard/fast accellerations in heavy start/stop traffic, they provide for more power/speed when cruising because that's primarily using pull muscles, and on bikes that have potential heelstrike, it makes life far easier to do very tight turns in poor road conditions. Sure, you can do without out them, but I'd rather run 120psi tires at 60psi than do without clipless pedals. .
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