Camera Mount for a Surly Long Haul Trucker

New Burlington OH BlacksmithI have to tell you right up front that I’m a still photographer kind of guy. I took pride in being able to go to an event and capture the essence of it in 1/1000 of a second. To be able to meet a perfect stranger and, in one brief moment, capture his or her soul.

Video is what you shot at a kid’s birthday party or on vacation with your dad’s 8MM Bell & Howell movie camera.

Duller than poodle poop

I thought video might be the way to show folks what rides look like. You know, mount a camera on the handlebars and grind away. Man, is that ever dull. And bouncy.

Wife Lila got up and said she had to quit watching because it was going to make her throw up. A budding videographer garners no respect in his own home.

Freakbike Friday the 13th Ride was my first video project

It suffered badly from a lack of editing. On top of that, my mounting method had too much “slap” in it. At any kind of speed, it vibrated all over the place.

Camera from sideA RAM Video Mount is solid

The first step to improve my on-bike video was to find some way to solidly mount the camera onto my second stem and still be high enough to shoot over my Arkel small handlebar bag (not shown here). I chose the second stem location so I didn’t eat up any more real estate on my main bar.

The RAM tall camera mount did the job.

RAM mounts take a modular approach. The handlebar u-bolt portion has a rubberized ball on it that the long top stemp clamps onto. Before I used it for the video camera, I had a Garmin GPS mount attached to the top of the stalk. Setting it up for a camera just required buying a camera mounting plate (which can be bought separately if you already own the other hardware).

Short mountIf you didn’t need the height, you could use a shorter mount, like the RAM Mount Aluminum Short Dual 1.0 inch Socket Arm. Both the tall and short stems are very solid, but I’d opt for the small one if possible.

The Camera mounting plate will fit both. It comes with a 1/4 x 20 bolt just the right size to hold the camera without punching through the camera body.

Use a quick release

Quick Shoe closeupThe only problem is that it takes a long time to unscrew the camera if you want to take a picture OFF the bar. (“Long time” is relative. Remember, I’m used to dealing in 1/1000s of a second.)

To solve the problem, I stopped in to see Pete Smith at FotoCamera Repair in Lake Worth, FL, the home of all kinds of old stuff. Pete’s kept my Nikons in working condition for almost 30 years.

Quick shoe on cameraHe rummaged around in his junk drawers until he came up with two Camera Quick Shoes. One side fits on the bottom of the camera and the other on the mounting bracket. Slide the two parts together, press a safety locking gizmo and your camera is safely attached, but can still be removed quickly when you need it.

Camera Quick Shoe on RAM mountThis isn’t the same model as my Camera Quick Shoe, but it looks like it works the same way.

I put one on the bike and one on my tripod.

To be on the safe side, I added a lanyard to the camera and loop it where the camera wouldn’t take a fall if the mount fails.

Camera, RAM mount and quick release on my LHT

Canon FS100 camera on RAM mount on Surly Long Haul TruckerHow well does it work?

It’s much more stable than the old mount, but it still picks up a lot of road vibration. You don’t realize how much you move your handlebars from side to side to keep your balance, either, until you watch the video. At slow speeds, you feel like your head is being whipped around. I’m going to see if there’s something out there with better image stabilization.

I’m learning to shoot in shorter bursts, to mix up close and long shots and to go for tight interview shots. Basically, it’s the same formula I learned for shooting still picture stories, except with sound and motion. I need to watch for more transition shots and find out a way to get cleaner audio.

Here’s my latest project from this week

I think I’ve learned a lot since the first Freakbike Milita ride in March. The camera mount certainly is a lot more stable.

[Update: If THIS ride didn’t shake the mount off the bike, nothing will. It didn’t make for wonderful video, but the mount and the camera didn’t bounce off.]

Slow Moving Vehicle Triangles on My Bike

3 Feet Please bike jerseyThree Feet Please Jersey

My virtual friend, Andrew, AKA Aushiker, was blogging about the 3 Feet Please jersey designed by Florida rider Joe Mizereck to encourage drivers to observe the three-foot minimum passing distance.

He was trying to start a groundswell campaign in his native Australia to get a similar One Meter Law passed.

Slow Moving Vehicle sign attached to Camelbak MULE

Slow Moving Vehicle Sign on Camelbak

I told Andrew that I like the jersey, but the Slow Moving Vehicle triangle attached to my CamelBak M.U.L.E. would cover it up, unfortunately.

He asked if I could show him how I have it mounted. Wife Lila snapped this just as Son Matt and I were getting ready to dip our wheels in the Gulf of Mexico after riding across Florida.

Taillights add visibility

Matt and I both rode with taillights. My RealLite and Nightrider were caught between flashes, but the always-on generator light is can be seen glowing.

We were on the last, short leg of our tour, so I left the panniers behind. Otherwise, you’d have seen another  SMV triangles mounted on the left one.

An experiment with the Flash Flag

I experimented with a Flash Flag, visible above my left knee. It’s kind of lost when panniers are mounted. I had to do some playing around to get it to work on the rear of my rack. I’ll dust it off and see if I can make it work on my Surly Long Haul Trucker and give it another try.

I bought mine after my eye was drawn to the flags when a couple of tourists come through town several years ago.

Bikes and Music: A Recipe for Pain?

Are bikes and music “a recipe for pain?”

Sponge toss at Elementary School carnivalA reader on a cycling group tossed a brickbat at me. [It’s an OSHA-approved brickbat. No bricks, bats nor elementary school principals were harmed in the taking of this photograph.]

I can’t see an experienced cyclist like you telling people to listen to music while they ride.  Diverting your attention from any of your senses while riding is a recipe for pain.  If you want to listen to music, take a ride in your car, or lounge around on your sofa.

I wouldn’t want my senses dulled

I responded by saying that I would take his advice to heart and ride naked from now on so that none of my senses would be dulled.

Biking ain’t brain surgery

Another poster came to my defense with a more reasoned response:

Audio if properly used, can add to enjoyment and concentration. Surgeons have favorite playlists for surgery and it is not a distraction. So during surgery, driving, working, running, walking, and riding, properly listening to audio can add to the enjoyment/concentration of/on the activity…Used properly (so you can hear surrounding sounds as well as audio), for some, audio can add to the enjoyment/concentration and at times provides motivation… If I find myself riding (or running) in a situation where I need to turn off the audio to improve my ‘concentration’ or “reduce distraction” ..I do so….

Just don’t make the assumption that just because I listen to music or an audiobook … that I’m an unsafe rider  or runner or surgeon.

What music do I listen to on the bike?

Archer AM Bicycle RadioHere’s a video that gets me ready to hop on the saddle every time I hear it. Missy and Shane put pictures of the U.S. bike tour to Luka Bloom’s The Acoustic Motorbike. I’d link to it directly, but the RIAA Music Police made YouTube take down the sound track.

My musical development is pretty stunted. It’s stuck in the 60s and 70s for the most part, back when songs had words that you could understand and play in mixed company. It’s got a lot of folk, protest, ironic country and rock in it.

I’ve got about 180 gig of music on my computer, but I find myself listening to less than half a dozen playlists on my Apple iPod 40 GB Classic.

Here are some of my MP3 playlists

[Son Matt hates PDF files, but it was easy to export the lists from iTunes in that format. I’m all about easy. Laziness is the mother of invention.]

  • Protest music playlist with artists like Phil Ochs, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Buffalo Springfield, Creedence Clearwater Revival and John Fogarty.
  • Fogcycle music playlist started out to be mostly John Fogarty music, but picked up a some CCR, Gillian Welch, Grateful Dead, Hoyt Axton, Jackson Browne and John Cougar Mellencamp along the way.
  • Cycle1 Playlist was one of my first biking mixes. It starts off, appropriately enough, with Bob Seeger’s Against the Wind. Weather titles show up here and in Cycle2 Playlist .  Things like A Hundred and Ten in the Shade, Louisiana Storm, Walk between the Raindrops, Black Sky, 10 Degrees and Getting Colder.
  • Trains playlist was put together for Grandson Malcolm, who is a Thomas the Train fanatic. I collected every song I could find about trains. The more I listened to the songs, the better I liked them.

Archer AM Bike RadioBro Mark matches music to training routines

Bro Mark sent me some CDs a few years back that had his music arranged for the type of riding he was going to do that day.

He’d mix hard-charging tunes with slower ones for interval training.

I’m not that organized. I tell it to sort by song title, that way I don’t get a long run of the same artist.

If I need a high-energy song to make it over a hill, then I punch the forward button until I come to one. Some days some songs feel right and other days they don’t. That’s why they make it possible to skip tracks.

I don’t like random shuffles, though. Even though I couldn’t tell you my play order, I sort of have a feel for it from hearing song A follow B after scores of playing. There’s something kinda comforting in that.

What music do you like?

This wraps up almost a week of music-related MP3 speaker reviews and tales of misheard songs. Tell us what you like to listen to (or if you think I should ride naked so that I don’t dull my senses).

[It’s easier than ever to leave comments. I removed the restriction that required you to register and log in to leave your graffiti on our walls.]

Bike Speakers: SanDisk Sansa Shaker & The Boostaroo

I’ve already named the Active Tunes i-RIDE Pro the winner in my unofficial MP3 speaker blast-out. Here are a couple of als0-rans that had some good features, but never made it on my bike more than once, if that.

The SanDisk Sansa Shaker is made for kids

sansa-on-bikeOne of Grandson Malcolm’s friends gave him a SanDisk Sansa Shaker and his dad handed it to me for test drive.

The hourglass shape mounted nicely to my bars with a strip of Velcro, but the volume wasn’t quite enough even on a quiet trail.

Its shape lent itself to fitting on my CamelBak strap, but I didn’t find the controls that easy to operate up there.

Malcolm and SansaThe Sandisk Sansa Shaker went back to Malcolm

The next day his mother, D-I-L Sarah, messaged me, “I don’t suppose you have a playlist for that little music player Malcolm has, do you? Just wondering what Malcolm’s gonna hear next after “I am the Walrus” and “Look At Miss Ohio.”

I assured her that there wasn’t anything on it that was worse than the mix tape I had put together when Son Matt was in grade school. It was called the Altered States tape and had on it every drinking and drugging song I could find.

We kept waiting for a call from his teacher wanting to talk to us about him singing Jackson Browne’s Cocaine or Jesse Winchester’s Twigs And Seeds during music class.

The call never came, probably because things were a little more relaxed in those days. Teachers and parents observed an unofficial rule: we won’t believe anything the kid says about the teacher if the teacher won’t believe anything the kid says about home.

The Boostaroo would be OK on a motorcycle

About the same time I bought the Byco WRX1, I saw a neat amplifier and some speakers that were designed to fit inside a motorcycle helmet.

The Boostaroo never made it in service on my bike.

Motorcycle helmets are made different than bike helmets. They have a lot more room in them and their sides come down lower on the sides. I never could find a way to mount the speakers, so it went into the junk drawer.

MP3 player video shoot-out

You can listen to all of the speakers here, including on the road.

Tomorrow I’ll post some of  my playlists. After all, what good does it do to have speakers if you don’t have any music to push through them?

What Comes in Second and Third after the i-RIDE Pro MP3 Speaker?

If the Active Tunes i-RIDE Pro is the best MP3 speaker I’ve found so far, who else makes it to the podium? Here is the r How To Get Ex Boyfriend Back eview of the Byco WRX1 and the older Active Tunes i-RIDE Classic

Second Place Byco WRX1 may not be available

Byco WRX1 stereo speakers

I don’t know if you can find my previous favorite anywhere. It didn’t show up on Amazon and all of the Google searches were dead ends.

The Byco WRX1 was a waterproof amplifier that was designed for the old style stereo players, but the cool thing was that it came with two small yellow speakers that were designed to fit in your bar ends. (Click on the picture to make it bigger.)

Byco WRX1 speaker mounted on CamelbakI never used the amplifier and I thought the barend mounting idea was a kluge, but I used the speakers (one at a time) in a small cellphone case strapped to my CamelBak, much like I’m using the i-RIDE Pro.

I liked the Byco speakers because they were small, waterproof and didn’t take batteries. They weren’t the loudest things in the world, but they were OK under your ear.

Active Tunes i-RIDE Classic

The i-RIDE Classic, the predecessor to the i-RIDE Pro, wasn’t bad for the $29.99 price.

On the plus side, it used replaceable AAA batteries, so you never had to worry about running out of juice on a long ride if you carried spares. I did a LONG, slow, headwind-plagued century one day and I was afraid I was going to die before the batteries did.

Active Tunes I-RIDE Classic with its Mickey Mouse earsThe only thing I didn’t like was the way it looked and the way it mounted. The funky handlebar mount DID work, but it looked like something I’d design (and that’s not a good thing).

The first version came in a blaring white and looked like a pair of Mickey Mouse Ears flopping around. Their second generation came in gray, which was a little less objectionable.

I gave a set to Kid Matt and he loved them for playing podcasts on his bike. He said they also made great shower speakers.

MP3 player video shoot-out

You can listen to all of the speakers here, including on the road.

More MP3 speakers reviewed tomorrow

Check back tomorrow for a look at two more speakers, the SanDisk Shaker and the Boostaroo.

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