We’ve rounded up some of those product ‘features’ that we think should go without saying. Feel free to disagree, or add your own below! When you’re looking at products, especially on the web, you’ll find yourself seeing bullet pointed lists of ‘product features’. Some of these will create the difference between one price point and another – carbon vs alloy, for example. Some of them will tip you over into the ‘ooh, yes, I’ll have this one instead of that one’ category – maybe an eco credential, or a guarantee.
But some ‘features’ are things that are so useful that we wonder why anyone still sells products without them. These should come as standard, not be promoted as features. ‘Bike has wheels’ is not a feature, it’s a basic requirement.
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By singletrackmag
Get the full story here:
https://singletrackmag.com/2023/02/11-things-that-should-be-standard-issue-not-special-feature/
Shoe sizes.
its a simple measurement thing. a 27.2mm seat post is very very close to 27.2mm. A 330ml can of beer, is 330ml... but shoes.... Aaaaggghhhh.
My feet are 305mm long, my foot is a foot, but I am a euro size 48, 49 and 50... and 12, 12.5, 13 and 13.5 in UK sizing.
Tyre manufacturers can do it. Their 700c tyres fit on 700c rims. There are not any companies making a 29er tyre that works OK on a 27.5 rim, but a bit too tight on a 29er rim. it's just a simple measurement and really should be standardised.
(have I invented elasticated tyre beads?)
Funny thing with tyres, they can all measure the bead, but none of them can measure the width.
Elastic lace keeps
A couple of pairs of shoes I own have these, I had no idea that's what they're for. Every day's a school day...
Bottle bosses - any full suss frame that can't fit a bottle cage inside the front triangle is automatically off my list of potential buys.
Grease ports/nipples for pedals, hubs and linkages that don’t used sealed bearings.
I know a bit “old fashioned” but can make your kit go on almost forever by flushing out any contaminants and reducing the need to disassemble things.
Also replaceable chainrings, no idea why some of the modern single ring stuff means you have to buy a whole new crank when it’s worn out.
Also replaceable chainrings, no idea why some of the modern single ring stuff means you have to buy a whole new crank when it’s worn out.
Are you sure about this? I thought the chain rings attach directly to the crank with no spider, but not aware of any one piece designs, unless it's really cheap BSO parts.
I've not seen a non-replaceable chainring on anything over about 150 quid (complete bke) since forever...
@tthew - I could be mistaken, or I have much lower standards for BSOs than you! 😂
I will have a scout round as I’m sure I remember seeing a few Shimano models where that was the case.
Admittedly it’s not all single ring cranks, as that would be madness especially given the price of some of them.
Also replaceable chainrings, no idea why some of the modern single ring stuff means you have to buy a whole new crank when it’s worn out
Would also think you've thrown out perfectly good cranks.
Bottle bosses – any full suss frame that can’t fit a bottle cage inside the front triangle is automatically off my list of potential buys.
Yeah, this is really annoying when you're used to riding with a hip pack and bottle on the frame. Bought a secondhand 2021 Pivot Firebird, so fairly high end bike. No bottle cage bosses in the triangle. Bought some strap on fidlock ones but there's nowhere in the front triangle where they will fit (2022 frame has bottle cage mounts so Pivot must have taken feedback on board).
All my double/triple chainsets are still chugging along with 9 or 10 speed and had no need to upgrade.
I was mistaken, I’m not that familiar with the Shimano direct mount system I had assumed the bolts attached the chain ring to a crank arm mounted spider. So the spider and chainring are a single part on some models, rather than just the chain ring getting swapped out.
At least one zip pocket on jerseys. Even expensive onse sometimes don't have this and I hate riding with the constant possibility of losing my keys/cards/money. Just give us a zip!
Bottle cap covers
Surprised by this. When did it become a thing? Never had a bottle with a cap...not even seen any i can recall. I suppose it could be more hygienic but I can't recall I've ever had the spout get so filthy that I'd not drink from it...the odd splatter of mud or dust but then i just spit the first mouthful as a 'cleaning' run (unless i thought that splatter was poop) but rare. Maybe it's because my bottles are always in the frame...id agree if they were under downtube. Also use mudguards in winter slop so that again limits mud flying towards bottle
Mud isn't the issue. It's cow, sheep and dog poo that make it a need for me
No 7, why did I not know this existed? off to buy!
Bottle cap covers
Yeah - not seen this as a thing before either - either as something I could buy or would wish to buy. It could be a right nause to have to flip up before drinking every time. I'd rather just gob on the bite valve or as said spit out the first mouthful....but then again my hygiene standards are pretty low!
Bottle bosses......I do feel rather smug about this one. When I 'converted' (hence username) back to MTB from road/tri in 2004 I was a proper outlier in the mtb world with my insistence that bottles were a thing. The world carried a bag on their back on even the shortest blasts around the local woods (and as they had a bag, they might as well fill it to the brim with other tat while they were at it). Not saying backpacks don't have their place but they are a necessary evil not a default option. A bottle and oneup tool inserted in the orifice of your choice sees you right for 90% of rides.
Zips on MTB tops. Zips are ubiquitous on roady kit because it's understood that you need a way to regulate your temperature on a ride where your effort level goes up and down. But MTB kit? Nah, none of that. Even the likes of Rapha and Assos seem to think that MTB kit should just be a bog standard short or long sleeve top with no way of adjusting the ventilation at all.
(I'm talking jerseys here rather than jackets - you know, jerseys that you wear when the weather is warm and you can start to overheat on a climb)
Missed out sealed headset bearings. Most bikes now come with a sealed lower bearing thanks to tapered steerers but some bikes still have a loose ball one up top, seizes up at the first sign of moisture.
I’ve not seen a non-replaceable chainring on anything over about 150 quid (complete bke) since forever…
The original chainset on my Hoodoo had a supposedly replaceable 4 bolt chainring but it's such an odd BCD that no-one can source replacements. It also uses a ridiculously long Square Taper BB (to match the Boost rear end) that is also unobtainable so that's a £500 bike with a throwaway front half of the drivetrain! My Merida hybrid also has a triple chainset that is riveted together, that was a £400 bike when new and is only 4 years old (bought second-hand for £80 during the pandemic, had never been used!).
Decathlon do bottle cap covers for 99p
Mags and online reviewers often don’t help here. I’ve lost count of the times the phrase ‘nice touch’ is used to describe some absolutely basic functionality on an extremely expensive item. Reflective accents on a garment are not a ‘nice touch’ they are the bare minimum!
I’ve lost count of the times the phrase ‘nice touch’ is used to describe some absolutely basic functionality
See also "life hacks".
I'll +1 bleed valves on pumps. I only have one on my shock pump and only relatively recently noticed I was using it. Then I pumped my tyres up with the track pump and thought "I need...."
Bottle cap covers
Surprised by this. When did it become a thing? Never had a bottle with a cap…not even seen any i can recall.
When I got into MTBing, my Isostar bottle (remember when a slightly bitter lemon flavour powder was literally the ONLY energy drink?!) had a flip top.
Mud isn’t the issue. It’s cow, sheep and dog poo that make it a need for me
A group of us on an MTB trip to Dartmoor - one guy was horrendously ill as a result of that. It wasn't food - we'd all eaten the same things - and eventually we isolated cow shit as the cause, we'd ridden through a few farmyards and bridleways across cow fields. He was really sick.
Zipped arm pit vents on all jackets
Zipped arm pit vents on all jackets
And removable hood so everyone is happy!
Speaking of cranks, especially with 1x. It's handy to be able to remove the chainring without having to remove the whole crankset, as you have to do with the majority of cranksets where the axle is fixed to the driveside. Some of the old 104 BCD cranks, you could unbolt (silly old bolt standard aside) the chainring and slip it off down the crank arm. You would in some cases have to take the pedal off, but it was easier none the less!
Zipped arm pit vents on all jackets
yes yes yes.
Ooh, hood stowage! Forgot that one!
Consistent sizing. How can I be a medium in one brand and an extra large in another. The amount of stuff that must get sent back because garment manufacturers can’t agree on sizing must be phenomenal
And removable hood so everyone is happy!
That's a good one. When I want a hood I really want it, but that's only a handful of rides a year.
Zips on MTB tops. Zips are ubiquitous on roady kit because it’s understood that you need a way to regulate your temperature on a ride where your effort level goes up and down. But MTB kit? Nah, none of that. Even the likes of Rapha and Assos seem to think that MTB kit should just be a bog standard short or long sleeve top with no way of adjusting the ventilation at all.
The solution is to stop buying flappy mtb jerseys. They also tend towards a zipped pocket or at the very least, usable rear pockets.
They also wick better and don't catch on things as easily.
Detachable hood I'd pass, a simple velcro or buttoned strap to hold it though, absolutely.
Big "phone" pockets on bags. Ideally this would be padded, but no-one does that.
Goggle strap retainers on helmets and a visor/peak that lifts far enough to fit them underneath. Is another few degrees too much to ask?
And removable hood so everyone is happy!
That’s a good one. When I want a hood I really want it, but that’s only a handful of rides a year.
Which is also why it's a terrible idea because the many of those rides will not start out as one of those rides.
Which is also why it’s a terrible idea because the many of those rides will not start out as one of those rides
Yeah sure but the removable hood can simply be removed and permanently live in a pocket of the jacket rather than launched into some corner of your house never to be seen again. But yeah take the point that stowable as Hannah suggested might be the better option.
Those cheap Bell water bottles they sell in supermarkets have a cap cover, mine broke off years ago but the bottle is still going strong. Handy to know Decathlon sell them!
Agree helmet peaks should accommodate goggles with a retainer clip at the back.
Never had a top headset bearing seize up, ever.
@jimmy Topeak Joe Blow pumps have bleed valves. Or my Sport/Sprint does at any rate.
So many right things. Especially when stuff can't be made to a consistent size.
I have a Taymory tri top that is 3XL which is a boob tube. Meanwhile L or XL shirts from Endura that fit fine. As for shoes... why is it only Lake makes shoes that are tue to size ?
Defo a +1 about why 95% of jerseys dont have zips in mtb jerseys. Does my head in that next to no mtb jerseys have not at least got a 1/4 or 1/3 length zip at the front. That's just an instant 'no buy' for me.
I've still got couple of very vintage Polaris jerseys that do have zips, which I still use. Otherwise its roadie jerseys or my favourite Sleepless/Endura one from 2011
If you buy a new bike that has air shocks, should a shock pump really be an extra? I suppose for serial bike buyers you probably have one already but for so many people it’s their first/only bike so it should be part of the deal.
Bottle lids, for those that have 'never seen them' Camelbak Dirt series bottles have them. Much easier than taking a swig of sheep poo and grit and spitting it out.
I just open and close the lid when the bottle is in the cage and then it's still easy to drink on the move.
One thing I didn't realise I'd miss is quick release hoses on bladders. Got myself a hip pack and the hose is fairly fiddly to pull out of the waist strap, so to empty the bladder and leave it open on the drainer to dry now involves pulling slack hose through the pack up to the nozzle. Covering the kitchen worktops from the 'looks clean enough' bag with sand/dirt whilst you sort the bladder is annoying.
(Can you get inline hose connectors?)
As well as hood stowage, a volume reducer should be standard for when wearing the needing the hood when not wearing a helmet. Only needs to be a little strap with a bit of velcro.
I had a bottle from Halfords in the 90s that had a lid on it, so they've been around for a long time, I suppose most bottles are made to be 'quick draw' though so you don't want to be faffing popping a lid open then trying to close it properly on an alpine decent....
(Can you get inline hose connectors?)
Yes - used to use them to connect 'personal hygiene' fittings in my drysuit.
[url= https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/hose-connectors/7640692?cm_mmc=UK-PLA-DS3A-_-google-_-CSS_UK_EN_Plumbing_%26_Pipeline_Whoop-_-Hose+Connectors_Whoop+(2)-_-7640692&matchtype=&aud-827186183886:pla-341406936417&cq_src=google_ads&cq_cmp=9771206590&cq_term=&cq_plac=&cq_net=g&cq_plt=gp&gclid=CjwKCAiAxvGfBhB-EiwAMPakqnrfxolIcQvrzbNTOWuPJNHvs14FO47_6hLIcNqVRKU7P07Zum2eqxoCfqUQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds ]This[/url] from RS plus the male counterpart should do the job (though check the ID of the hose before ordering).
Never wanted or needed a zip on a jersey - anything I carry goes in my pack or my short pockets. I'm a mountain biker not a roadie and want a plain neck.
Similarly for the bottle/cage mounts - I had my small frame made specifically without them - I almost always ride with a pack unless I'm doing uplifts so it would be unnecessary and I preferred the DT to be clean. To fit a cage the seat tube would have had to have been 3-4" taller and that would have looked awful imho.
If I were to run a bottle it would have to have a cap as I don't want to be drinking from anything that low to the ground without a cover. Don't get me started on bottle bosses under the dt!!!
just shows that there's different sides to each argument as people have different requirements
Can't see the feature, but I hope it included frame protection tape - even if just in high-wear areas rather than full Invisiframe style.
AFAIK only Nukeproof make a point of adding it to their frames. Any other brands do it?
Agree helmet peaks should accommodate goggles with a retainer clip at the back.
Is this a specific full-face helmet thing, or a suggestion for every MTB helmet? Disagree if the latter, literally no-one I ride with, spread across 3 or 4 groups uses goggles, I think they're a pretty niche product so an accommodation for them is certainly not needed as standard.
Disagree if the latter, literally no-one I ride with, spread across 3 or 4 groups uses goggles, I think they’re a pretty niche product so an accommodation for them is certainly not needed as standard.
Even if only 0.0001% of people wear them, what's the downside of a peak that moves further back? They already pivot in many/most cases anyhow.
Ditto the retainer clip, sure it might only be used once or twice a year but I don't see that there's any downside to having one.
I can accept adding a retaining clip might be an "upgrade" but a peak that doesn't move enough to actually provide any increase in function may as well be fixed, its a bit like having a door that only opens part way.
Enduro-specific helmets should be goggle-friendly for sure.
XC ones not really.
Is this a specific full-face helmet thing, or a suggestion for every MTB helmet? Disagree if the latter, literally no-one I ride with, spread across 3 or 4 groups uses goggles, I think they’re a pretty niche product so an accommodation for them is certainly not needed as standard.
I was mostly talking about full facers but the full head style enduro helmets would benefit as well.
One of those things though, just because you don't use them doesn't mean others don't.
but a peak that doesn’t move enough to actually provide any increase in function may as well be fixed
There's a question actually, does anyone actually move the peak up or down (except if it goes far enough back to stick goggles etc under) or is this the opposite of "Things That Should Be Standard Issue" and rather "something that's standard issue that needn't be included at all?" (I guess that's a thread in its own right)
It's for the roadies but... activating the damn power meter that's included in the bike! It absolutely blows my mind that manufacturers can sell their bike with a power meter, but then charge an additional fee to actually turn it on
Would be useful for brands to provide rim stickers that were at least in part reflective at what I imagine would be very little cost.
11 Things That Should Be Standard Issue, Not Special Feature
Sparkles in bike paint jobs.
There’s a question actually, does anyone actually move the peak up or down
Is that not a safety thing? I imagine a moveable peak is going to do far less nasty things to your neck in a crash than a fixed one. And is replacable to boot.
Is that not a safety thing? I imagine a moveable peak is going to do far less nasty things to your neck in a crash than a fixed one. And is replacable to boot.
MrsP has a Spesh helmet with fixed peak, but it's only held on by a couple of weeny press clips so in a crash would come off faster than you can say "rotational injuries". My lid's adjustable peak is held on by a couple of screw in studs that act as the pivots so once it's moved as far as it can it'll either snag or break.
or my short pockets.
This is something that should be fired into space along with those who think it's a good idea.
Anything tight enough not to flap when pedaling is too tight to actually wear, because, you know, muscles and pedaling.
Anything that isn't too tight, flaps around too much when you're pedaling, and chafes. And is really bloody annoying.
And then even a relatively minor off gets either a bunch of keys smashed into your leg, or a pointy rock destroying your phone.
Pedaling and pockets simply don't work. And they haven't worked in the 40 years i've been pedaling. The only exception i've found is OS maps or laminated route cards.
I get off my bike and walk around. Pockets are useful.
Bibs you can wee in
Yes definitely! Why has no-one else seconded this? Are you all blokes?? I don't understand how manufacturers can claim "all day comfort" if you can't wee or have to strip naked to do it. I won't buy bibs that don't have some sort of wild wee feature. Stretchy pull2pee are my favourite as there is no chance of zip failure.
And while I'm at it, pockets in bibsorts. Front pockets in jerseys. Front pockets in jackets. Zip pocket on the sleeve for you credit card and touch-and-go coffee without having to go through contortions finding it in a rear pocket.
And why oh why do cranks on small bikes come in ridiculously long lengths? My fitter recommends 155cm for me (I'm 159cm) but on many bikes 165 is the smallest, and in the higher ranges of some well-known brands its 170.
Pockets are lovely.
Key thing is to make sure the phone sits on top of your thigh (doesnt move around, wont be under you in a crash), rather than to the side (jiggles with every pedal, highly likely to land on it)
I would also like to see bearings in the swing arm so standard bearing presses can be used, rather than blind drifting needed for front triangle bearings.
I get off my bike and walk around. Pockets are useful.
So do i, the stuff i need is already in a pocket, that's not flapping around on my leg...
I'm still hanging on to two really old Decathlon bottles purely because of the cap covers. We get caked in all sorts of horrible stuff, week in week out, and they're the only thing preventing a mouth full of sheep/cow/dog poo. They're getting harder to find. Decathlon still make one but it's their cheap one that falls out on the rough stuff so is useless.
Camelbak do a bottle that has a little cover over the valve. Find it very useful as I ride through a couple of fields with cow and sheep shit in them.
Grease nipples on bearings? I just cannot understand why not any more. Its not hard to do
Grease nipples are fine on loose or open bearings but serve no function on sealed units.
Barring a Shimano hub how many loose bearings would you typically find on a bike these days?
Camelbak do a bottle that has a little cover over the valve.
As do fidlock. Although i do have a large SiS bottle I like, I use a water balloon to protect the valve from muck.
Pockets are lovely.
I do wish the pocket placement on trousers/shorts were better. Internal sleeves in pockets for things like multi-tools/phones etc should be the norm..