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Home Pedal Power How to Protect your Bike
Friday, 07 August 2009 15:59

How to Protect your Bike

Written by Tom Jones
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The fear of losing our bike to a thief and never seeing it again often deters us from bicycling as much as we should.

The truth is, however, that most bi­cycles are stolen from home, from out in the yard or out of the garage, where the bike spends most of its time.

So wherever it is, if you leave your bike unattended, lock it. The best place to store your lock is to use it on your bike.

U-Locks are the most secure type of bike lock, followed by cable lock systems. But even thick cables can be cut. Only lock your bike to an immovable object. Trees, posts, and chain-link fences can be easily broken or cut, allowing the bike to be lifted over the post and carried away.

Look for something embedded in the concrete, such as a permanent bike rack or a parking meter, but be sure that the locked bike cannot be slipped over the top.

Don’t park your bike so that it ob­structs handicapped zones, stairs, en­trances, ramps, pathways, door- opening buttons, or traffic thorough­fares. Be courteous and use bicycle racks whenever possible.

The best way to use a U lock is to put the U around that immovable object, push your bike up to the post so that the bars pass inside both the frame and rear wheel, and then place the front wheel and locking bar in place.

Don’t lock the bike to itself by lock­ing the front wheel to the frame. A thief can simply carry the bike away. Don’t pass the lock only through the front wheel, rear wheel, and post. You

Two opportunities to meet and greet will return to find two wheels without a frame. You must pass a lock through every component of your bike that you wish to keep, so get both wheels and your frame all at once.

The favorite way to remove a U lock is to break it by prying it open with a tool. To make this as difficult as pos­sible, fill the space inside the U with as many components as possible, so that you leave the thief little room to work.

Use your bike, front wheel and the post so that you can still close the lock.

Use the smallest lock that will still work. Some U locks are wider than necessary, making it harder to fill and far easier to fit a jack into than with a thinner narrower U.

If you already have a cable lock, wrap the cable tightly around your bicycle and a fixed object, keeping the locking device as high above the ground as possible. This will make it difficult to gain leverage by bracing one leg of a bolt cutter against the ground.

I always recommend a cable that is at least six feet long. Place the cable though both wheels, around your frame and then around that immov­able object.

You can really foil the thief by using both a U Lock and a cable. Few thieves will have the tools to violate both sys­tems. Get a quality lock from a local bike store where you’ll get good advice.

When parking your bike, mix it up if possible by changing locations. The same bike parked in the same spot day after day is an easy target

Let’s all lock our bikes, and let’s all use them more often and encourage others to do the same.

Last modified on Friday, 07 August 2009 16:03

1 Comment

  • Comment Link Suzuki motorcycles Tuesday, 14 February 2012 05:34 posted by Suzuki motorcycles

    Bike the most easy vehicle to ride as well as to move away due to it's light weight and easy to pickup and move. It good to lock up it with a fixed support to prevent it to get stolen.

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