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Performance
MC-7 ATB pedals
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Submitted by
BigLarry
a Cross Country Rider
from South NJ Date Reviewed: January 8, 2002 | | Duration Product Used: | More than 3 years | | Price Paid: |
$40.00 | | Purchased At: | Performance | | Strengths: | Low cost, easy to get out of with small angle float, easy to clean with hose after every ride | | Weaknesses: | broken metal tabs, sometimes hard to get clipped in, especially when dirty or muddy. For safety, I adjusted them to very loose - they worked great even in highly technical riding (lots of rocks and big logs). | | Similar Products Used: | No other clipless pedals | | Bike Setup: | Univega Alpina 7.1 But I just broke the frame (rear stay) under high cranking and bought a Trek Fuel 90! | | Bottom Line: | I used these pedals for 7 years, and replaced them a couple times (once under warrantee, again at 4 years) when I broke off the tabs. But I ride very often and very hard and I'm 240+ lbs. I ride in so much mud so often (3X/week) that my back yard raised up an inch from all the bike washings. I'd take a couple inch mud coat off the whole bike. I had problems unclipping when the mud got on the pedals and dried into cement. I ended up using 1/3 of a water bottle each time I dabbed in the mud to clean the cleats and it helped. I also was jamming my chain with severe chain suck with all the mud. But the chain suck and pedal binding were both solved with White Lightning lubricant. Once I started using it on my chain and pedals, my chains lasted 2 years instead of 3 months. All the dried mud just dropped off the cleats and pedals!!! (But I still didn't leave clumps of wet mud on the cleats when riding. I stomped off the bulk and then quickly squirted right on the cleats with the water bottle.) So these pedals worked fine with proper technique. I give them only 4 chillies due to the lack of high strength (but I do use them very hard). | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Jerico
a Cross Country Rider
from Daly City, CA USA Date Reviewed: October 9, 2001 | | Favorite Trail: | Some dirt near campus. | | Duration Product Used: | 1 Year | | Price Paid: |
$40.00 | | Purchased At: | Perf Bikes | | Strengths: | Inexpensive and tough. | | Weaknesses: | A tad to tough to get into. I can imagine other pedals that are a lot better than this. | | Similar Products Used: | None, but the 515's look like they rival it. | | Bike Setup: | '99 Cannondale f-700 w/LX Cranks | | Bottom Line: | These pedals were a B-day gift. At first I didn't like them because it caused me to lose control when it didn't do their job (it disengaged after a hard jolt of the bike). I later started used them daily after find out how to properly maintain them. These have to be clean to garantee performance, if you happen to dab so oil on it or get some dirt loged into it, it will compromise the ability to keep your foot locked in place. Dispite all that, I found them to be truely relyable pedals that when I started to use them more often. As long as you have the tension firm enough, these will serve you well. I broke the binding on the left pedal after a terrible crash. I will not replace them with the mC-7's. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
john
a Weekend Warrior
from silver spring, md Date Reviewed: June 20, 2001 | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Purchased At: | performance bike (came w/ bike) | | Strengths: | work well, haven't had any problems price is probably good but since they came with the bike, i have nothing to say | | Weaknesses: | none yet | | Similar Products Used: | first clipless, used flat pedals and toe clips. | | Bottom Line: | i guess since i have never used anything else, i have nothing better to compair this too. they are so much better than toe clips, easy to get into and easy to get out of (fell once when i stopped and forgot i was in clipless pedals, oops) i like them | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Robb Robison
a Cross Country Rider
from Beaverton Oregon Date Reviewed: June 3, 2001 | | Favorite Trail: | Hagg Lake | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$32.00 | | Purchased At: | Performance | | Strengths: | Works well for the beginner like me, only took a couple of tries to learn. The pedals somtimes don't "click" as loud as I would like but this is very minor. | | Weaknesses: | none so far | | Similar Products Used: | First time clipless user | | Bike Setup: | Trek 7000 w/Judy XC,shimano STX components,Cannondale and Botranger supension seatpost and seat | | Bottom Line: | Good product for the beginnner, easy to learn and cheap if you decided to go back to regular pedals. Look good in silver and so far seem very well constructed! | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Connor
a Weekend Warrior
from Denver, CO, USA Date Reviewed: March 21, 2001 | | Duration Product Used: | More than 3 years | | Price Paid: |
$30.00 | | Purchased At: | Performance | | Strengths: | Price, durability, maintenance-free, reasonably light (350 gm/pair). | | Weaknesses: | Sometimes hard to clip in-helps to replace cleats regularly. I have been through 3 sets already. | | Similar Products Used: | None | | Bike Setup: | Trek 970/Judy XC | | Bottom Line: | My first and only clipless pedals, have used them for almost 4 years of daily commuting to work and mountain biking in CO and Moab. These things are great-unbreakable, need almost no service, and the price is right. I use them all winter in the snow for commuting and they work reasonably well. We don't have lots of mud in CO so I can't comment here. I personally see no reason to spend more on a pedal unless you are embarrassed to not have a "brand name" pedal (the paint and names wear off anyway). | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Glenn
a Weekend Warrior
from Potomac, MD Date Reviewed: June 12, 2000 | | Duration Product Used: | 6 months | | Strengths: | Price. Good first or starter set. | | Weaknesses: | AWFUL performance in mud. Just awful. Rust!! | | Similar Products Used: | None | | Bike Setup: | Fisher Aquila. | | Bottom Line: | The pedals perform fine EXCEPT in mud, and in a race this is unforgivable. (Of course, most recreational racers have better pedals anyway). I had a critical lap at the 24 Hours of Snowshow undermined by these pedals' rotten performance with muck. I'm taking them off the first chance I get. Sorry Performance.
If you just want good, solid, inexpensive clipless pedals, and you're not going to go into the muck and grease, these or the Performance-brand campus pedals are good choices.
OTOH, if you intend to do more serious riding, buy up to something better. I think TIME pedals are in the future. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Chittick
a Racer
from littleton co Date Reviewed: September 24, 1999 | | Favorite Trail: | the lynn trail, VA | | Duration Product Used: | 2 Years | | Strengths: | great price. availability of colors. they work. | | Weaknesses: | the strongest setting is about the shim m-747's weakest setting. occasionally you'll buy a set where the pedal spins off of the spindle. just warranty them. | | Similar Products Used: | m-747, m-535, ritchey comp | | Bike Setup: | 98 stumpy m2, sx ti, mucho xtr. | | Bottom Line: | if you wanna try clipless, you can't go wrong. just make sure you never pay more than 39.99 for them. if they're marked higher, wait a week and performance will put them on sale. as your skills grow, however, you'll find the slop inside the pedal to be a bit much and you will eventually start jumping out of them, no matter how tight you set them. at that point, upgrade to atac's or 747's. | Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Nick Fenton
a Racer
from ClintonCT Date Reviewed: August 7, 1999 | | Favorite Trail: | The little one in my back yard | | Duration Product Used: | 6 months | | Strengths: | Price, ease of use, great first time pedals,easy to maintane | | Weaknesses: | Tiny bit heavy,READ THIS*****************************I****KNOW**AN ****EASY FIX *******FOR ********RUST*********** | | Similar Products Used: | Ritchy CompV2 | | Bike Setup: | Trek | | Bottom Line: | A great pedal, easer in and out than LX pedals (5-5 something)Awsome in mud I couldn't belive it but watch out for snow! If your a first timer Buy these master them then in another three years buy some $49.99 Ritchys. Oh yeah the mc-7 are indo structable- read my in Shoes/Nike Inyo- that crash almost totaled the bike but the pedals just got crammed with mud Go ahaid E-mail me! | Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Ben
a Weekend Warrior
from San Diego, Ca Date Reviewed: August 1, 1999 | | Duration Product Used: | less than 1 month | | Strengths: | Price | | Weaknesses: | None Yet | | Similar Products Used: | None | | Bike Setup: | '98 SBC Rockhopper A1 FS | | Bottom Line: | My first clipless pedals. I haven't hit the trails yet but my commutes to work have been great. I have only one long steep hill to tackle on my way home and I love the extra power that I have been missing while using toe clips.For only $25 I can't complain. 5 Stars for the price | Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
TrailRipper
a Cross-Country Rider
from Wisconsin Date Reviewed: June 14, 1999 | | Favorite Trail: | Rock Lake (Chequamegon) | | Duration Product Used: | 1 Year | | Strengths: | Easy to clip in Easy to clip out when muddy Price | | Weaknesses: | Not really easy to get into in the mud Rust! | | Similar Products Used: | Nashbar | | Bike Setup: | Rockhopper FS (97) w/Judy XC and Englunds XTR V brakes GS 4.0 | | Bottom Line: | After a year in a half of pretty rigorous riding, the MC-7's held up quite well. Sure, the paint scratched off where the cleat hits it and the pedal gets a bit looser, but they are cosmetic and easy to fix problems respectively. The only thing that bothers me is that after a recent ride of unusual mud and water levels, the pedals became rusty. Hence, I have to replace them soon. I've considered the Time ATAC's--to much release angle--and the 747's-price. And then I considered these, and they were good for the money. | Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Brian
a Cross-Country Rider
from Indianapolis Date Reviewed: May 15, 1999 | | Duration Product Used: | 6 months | | Strengths: | Cheap clipless pedal | | Weaknesses: | Quality | | Bike Setup: | Fisher Paragon, with Manitou SXR | | Bottom Line: | I bought these as my first pair of clipless pedals. After about five months, the pedal body came unscrewed off of the spindle while I was riding. I also have a hard time cliping into them. I'm thinking of going with the ATAC pedals next. But overall, these were a good, cheap set of clipless to start off on. | Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Flip
a Cross-Country Rider
from Wheeling, IL Date Reviewed: April 4, 1999 | | Favorite Trail: | Deer Grove | | Duration Product Used: | less than 1 month | | Strengths: | affordable | | Weaknesses: | only 4 deg float | | Similar Products Used: | first time I've ever tried clipless | | Bike Setup: | Performance M-405 with Spyder fork | | Bottom Line: | These are the first clipless pedals I've ever tried. I bought these and a pair of Specialized Team Comp shoes. I know that the more float you have the better but for 33 bucks these were hard to pass up. I didn't have too much trouble clipping in and out of them even in muddy conditions. I do have a tendency to unclip when I don't want too though. There are two awesome things that clipless pedals give you that outweigh my complaints though. I can bunny hop like there is no tomorrow and I can power my way up steep inclines like a mountain goat. Overall, I'm happy with the purchase. | Overall Rating: |
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