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Weather is horrendous here in the UK atm.I'd be riding it until the mudguards turned up.
Town ride through riding up and down stairs and jumping off stuff!....Weather is horrendous here in the UK atm.
Weather IS utter shite here atm (southern UK) which is why Mrs and me on Sunday chickened out of riding on the South Downs which are a mud fest ... 2-3 hour ride followed with me taking 1-2 hours to clean the bikes, even with mudguards on? Nah, fuck that ...Town ride through riding up and down stairs and jumping off stuff!....
Not bothered about the mud to much, I just don't want it building up at the back of the motor and suspension pivots lower down, just trying to prevent that a little bit. Apart from that, it doesn't bother meNo mudguards on any of my bikes and I ride all year. Getting muddy is part of the fun (and I have never found any that really work!)
Had Invisiframe fitted on bike, so hoping this will stop the mud guard scratching the frame.I use the mucky nutz on the rear and a topeak on the front. know mudguards are a pain but I just can't stand a cold wet bum. The bike still gets muddy but my back and backpack stay dry. My car seats and The washing machine also appreciate it.
PS. Don't forget to put some helicoil tape on the frame where you attach the mudguard.
In the past I've put black Gorilla tape on rear mudguard mounting points to protect our frames but when removing the tape (which is incredibly sticky) have sometimes at the same time lifted the Invisiframe. What I now do is first put clear Gorilla tape (much less sticky) on mounting points then put black Gorilla tape over the top so it comes off more easily.Had Invisiframe fitted on bike, so hoping this will stop the mud guard scratching the frame.

Sounds like a good idea, I'll give it a try thanks.In the past I've put black Gorilla tape on rear mudguard mounting points to protect our frames but when removing the tape (which is incredibly sticky) have sometimes at the same time lifted the Invisiframe. What I now do is first put clear Gorilla tape (much less sticky) on mounting points then put black Gorilla tape over the top so it comes off more easily.
The front mudguards (RRP) stay on all year round but we have large Mudhuggers in winter then change to RRP rears when it gets drier.
Even if the rain stopped it's too windy to go out today, we'd just be blown off our bikes.
View attachment 174616
Had Invisiframe fitted on bike, so hoping this will stop the mud guard scratching the frame.
Yes thanks, think I will do this too.Me too but it will wear through th invisiframe which is quite thin.
It wears where the mud gets between the zip ties and the frame.
I put thick helicoil tape over the invisiframe where the mudguard attaces for the winter, then remove it with a little bit of heat when no longer needed. The invisframe stays in place without a problem. It stays nice and shiny (or matt).
I suppose it depends how fussy you are. After all is an MTB!
Mud galore here!I can understand waiting for frame protection, but mud guards? Where's the concern?
-guy living where there's zero mud
Sadly unless you put mega ugly full mudguards on you still get filthy. Short ones keeps mud off your face is about their limits really.
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Your right there, just been out on it for the first time, got absolutely covered!Sadly unless you put mega ugly full mudguards on you still get filthy. Short ones keeps mud off your face is about their limits really.

Yes mud in eyes great for stys etc. Just can't win with the big tyres and massive downtube really I think. Big back mudguard keeps my rear end clean .Your right there, just been out on it for the first time, got absolutely covered!
I've not yet received the mudguards yet, I've only ordered short one's ( I don't like the big ugly one's too. ) short one at the back is just to cover up the back of the motor, and stop that big build of mud there.
Got mud in my eyes and all over my face, wasn't wearing goggles, hopefully a mudguard up front will stop some of that.
View attachment 174786
Front: have RRP Standard front mudguards left on all year round - prevents most muck being blasted by the front wheel. Also stops stones damaging the front of the down tube. Also helps to protect fork seals.Your right there, just been out on it for the first time, got absolutely covered!
I've not yet received the mudguards yet, I've only ordered short one's ( I don't like the big ugly one's too. ) short one at the back is just to cover up the back of the motor, and stop that big build of mud there.
Got mud in my eyes and all over my face, wasn't wearing goggles, hopefully a mudguard up front will stop some of that.
Did this on our Trek Rails (is 2mm neoprene).You’ll be lucky to stop the build up of shite on the lower pivots on a 177/144 with any mudguard (177 owner myself), so you might as well not get too worried about it. I’ve tried a few to no avail.
Rrp pro guard does an excellent job at protecting the pivots. I had hoped it would have been enough to protect my back but alas, it's too short for that it seems. My ass was completely soaked during last riding. (Road water combined with new kryptotals didn't help). For the front I have ordered the original Fox short mudguard, hopefully it will work at protecting my face at least.You’ll be lucky to stop the build up of shite on the lower pivots on a 177/144 with any mudguard (177 owner myself), so you might as well not get too worried about it. I’ve tried a few to no avail.
Fox short protects my faceRrp pro guard does an excellent job at protecting the pivots. I had hoped it would have been enough to protect my back but alas, it's too short for that it seems. My ass was completely soaked during last riding. (Road water combined with new kryptotals didn't help). For the front I have ordered the original Fox short mudguard, hopefully it will work at protecting my face at least.
Saw this on a Cube FB group, this is what I've ordered, they've stuck the Front Mudguard on the back as well, so goes all the way down at the back and guards the lower pivots and motor, and not as ugly looking as the big massive ones.You’ll be lucky to stop the build up of shite on the lower pivots on a 177/144 with any mudguard (177 owner myself), so you might as well not get too worried about it. I’ve tried a few to no avail.

That is very nice looking! What brand is it? My only issue is those type seats have always hurt for me to sit on.
Check out these rear mudguards to protect the frame and no ugly attachments but invisible.