Specialized plug and play fender (a.k.a. mudguard) rattle
Posted: 18 Dec 2018, 12:50pm
I am trying to help a friend reduce the rattle on a 2017 Specialized Diverge fitted with Specialized "plug and play" fenders. There is no brake bridge, and hence nothing to attach a mudguard bridge to. There is a pair of single stays at the back, and the only other anchor point is at the front by the bottom bracket. The guards are alloy rather than plastic, and are designed to fit this bike. The stays slide into a dedicated mounting and it is all quite tidy. There isn't a missing accessory to make a bridge where a rear caliper brake would normally go, as you get on BMC, Cannondales etc.: it's really designed to be supported at both ends only. The guards look like this https://www.lexpertvelo.com/documents/I ... 2015-7.jpg
Unsurprisingly, things are all a bit "boingy" with this long arc of unsupported aluminium, and every time you go over anything there is a "thunk" as the mudguard slaps the seat tube. The kit has a rubber spacer to stop any metal on metal contact, but it still clatters away in normal riding. Taking it as read that this is not a brilliant design and that there are probably better mudguards / fenders that could have been chosen, does anyone have a tried and tested way of solving this problem neatly?
I was thinking of adding a plastic mudguard bridge just above where the mudguard slaps the seat tube and using an O-ring stretched round the seat tube to brace the mudguard against the seat tube (with a rubber spacer in between mudguard and frame to stop the paint being worn away). This feels a bit Heath Robinson, so there must be a more elegant way? I don't think Sugru or similar would hold, and I don't want to damage the paintwork. The other way might be to make a fake brake bridge out of e.g. Perspex that bungees onto the seat stays with O-rings and gives an extra attachment point for the mudguard closer to the middle, but that feels even more Heath Robinson and I can see it wearing the paint away over time.
Thanks for any ideas, apart from "I wouldn't have started from here", because I wouldn't have, if it was my bike!
Unsurprisingly, things are all a bit "boingy" with this long arc of unsupported aluminium, and every time you go over anything there is a "thunk" as the mudguard slaps the seat tube. The kit has a rubber spacer to stop any metal on metal contact, but it still clatters away in normal riding. Taking it as read that this is not a brilliant design and that there are probably better mudguards / fenders that could have been chosen, does anyone have a tried and tested way of solving this problem neatly?
I was thinking of adding a plastic mudguard bridge just above where the mudguard slaps the seat tube and using an O-ring stretched round the seat tube to brace the mudguard against the seat tube (with a rubber spacer in between mudguard and frame to stop the paint being worn away). This feels a bit Heath Robinson, so there must be a more elegant way? I don't think Sugru or similar would hold, and I don't want to damage the paintwork. The other way might be to make a fake brake bridge out of e.g. Perspex that bungees onto the seat stays with O-rings and gives an extra attachment point for the mudguard closer to the middle, but that feels even more Heath Robinson and I can see it wearing the paint away over time.
Thanks for any ideas, apart from "I wouldn't have started from here", because I wouldn't have, if it was my bike!