Just in: Crud Roadracer
Pete Tomkins' plastic Crud Catcher was the first effective mountain bike mudguard when it came out in 1991, and it's still going strong today, in a heavily revised form.
Now Pete and his son Jamie have brought the same creative thinking to road mudguards and, after eight months of hard work and sleepless nights, come up with this new Roadracer set.
Set to hit shop shelves at the start of September, the set includes both front and rear guards, and has been designed to fit 700x23c and 700x25c tyres.
The plastic fenders mount without tools, using thumbnuts, rubber O-rings and zip-ties, all of which are included. Claimed weight is just 160g a pair.
The stays that connect them to your fork legs and seatstays are made of glass-filled nylon and are designed to snap if anything goes wrong so they don't wreck your spokes.
We stuck the Roadracers on an Enigma fitted with 23c wheels. Fitting was a doddle thanks to the clear instructions, although a little fiddly at times.
Clearance is tight, and can take a bit of fiddling to get right – if you're running a low-profile carbon fork and 25c wheels you may struggle – but first impressions are good. We'll put them through a proper test and let you know how they fare. RRP is £27.99.

User Comments
There are 23 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 23 of 23 comments
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giant mancp
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 7:49 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
These look good with a little more style than the SKS raceguards and the recent ones from Topeak.
Good price and the road alternative to their off road Crudcatcher which is excellent.
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NapoleonD
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 8:09 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
Rear could do with being a little longer as on our wet club runs we have to have a flap...
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giner1961
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 9:48 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
Yes agree the rear could do with been a bit longer, but the days off all riders using mudflaps has gone im afraid.
i have been using the brake piviot bolt to ziptie my mudguards to bike for years, gives you 2 to 5mm more clearence as it pulls the guard right up to the frame, and up to the bridge of the forks, and no brackets to break.
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gabriel959
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 12:01 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
These look great - cheaper than the SKS too, if the performance is good I will be getting some.
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softlad
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 1:57 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
looks like a useful alternative to raceblades, but the coverage does not look good enough for serious winter work - especially in a group...
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mr.crud
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 6:38 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Yes softlad, not suitable for real serious winter work, but perfect for bikes like that beauty above. You won't get plastic thin enough to fit between tyre and seattube on most classy roadbikes. That's the kind of bikes the 'roadracers' are aimed at.
Cheers
Mr.C
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antfly
Posted Sat 22 Aug, 9:45 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
It doesn`t look as if there is any clearance at all.
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zoso7
Posted Sun 23 Aug, 7:29 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
Do they fit on a Giant Defy?!
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Avoneer
Posted Sun 23 Aug, 10:35 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
Should do - I've a Defy 4 and will be fitting them as soon as they arrive then will update my post in the Commuting section: http://www.bikeradar.com/road/forums/viewtopic.php?t=12644557&highlight=
Pat...
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MyPace
Posted Sun 23 Aug, 12:52 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
i've always fancied some 'fake tyre' mudguards like on this car:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/carreviews/supercars/2736860/Racing-green.html
However, i'm too lazy to make some. These look good to me, i'd certainly be interested. plenty of other mudguards for proper winter coverage. These look ideal for frames without much clearance.
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redvee
Posted Sun 23 Aug, 8:49 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Couple of Youtube videos courtesy of the Tompkins camera
Install
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJuJXk8aJs8
Crash test
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55thL5q6hxs
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Woollyjoe
Posted Sun 23 Aug, 9:20 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Compared to the SKS race blades, they look better, have better contact points and longer coverage - i like that the later part of the blades are thinned as there is less water at this point and reduces opportunity for rubbing. Have you also seen those white fluffy pads - great idea to keep blades off wheels.
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nferrar
Posted Mon 24 Aug, 6:23 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
It's such a wasted opportunity to not make the rear longer - it may as well finish 6" shorter (like raceblades) as to go any longer is only to help someone behind you and they don't go far enough around for that so you're still only saving yourself from a wet arse.
Planning to avoid them given how much the MTB raceguards suck (fine if you never want to take them off but someone tell me how good design involves a metal shallow-grooved bolt in a plastic surround - a three year old could tell you it will round off the plastic but these guys who spent months designing them couldn't...).
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brant@shedfire
Posted Mon 24 Aug, 7:53 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
"Planning to avoid them"
What does that actually mean?
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Tall Rubber Duck
Posted Mon 24 Aug, 8:02 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
these do look good, who's selling them? I've only found cyclelife so far...
http://www.cyclelife.com/Product.aspx?pc=2&pt=125&pg=4899
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Avoneer
Posted Mon 24 Aug, 8:32 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I think they are only going out to the shops this week.
Pat...
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pedro118118
Posted Mon 24 Aug, 9:35 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I have a Cervelo Soloist Team as my 'second' bike, but fitting any kind of mudguard to the front wheel is almost impossible, as the gap between the tyre and the down-tube is tiny, due to the aero profiling/geometry. Perhaps these will do the trick???
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turnerjohn
Posted Tue 25 Aug, 10:50 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
at last a set of mudguards that look cool ! ...us bike tarts can stay dry now lol!
Just proves us Brits can design stuff just as good looking as those pesky Italians !
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cock_sportif
Posted Thu 27 Aug, 2:24 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Well done Crud! These look better than anything else so I'll probably treat myself. Agree they could be a little longer at the back, maybe flairing out like the classic flap?
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forgotrafe
Posted Fri 28 Aug, 3:43 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
I've posted a short review here: http://www.forgot.co.uk/?p=269
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quantick1941
Posted Sun 6 Sep, 1:53 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Went straight to my barber's for a haircut straight from work last week in torrential rain and sat in the chair for 20 minutes with a soaking wet arse!
Been looking for a while for suitable guards for my Shorter "Calida" and these look to be just the job - Gonna buy just as soon as I get back from holiday.
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swagman
Posted Wed 23 Sep, 12:15 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
All the advanced technology in bicycles and these come down to bits of plastic and rubber bands!!
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northumbrian1
Posted Sun 4 Oct, 5:30 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Not convinced that plastic is a good one to use. What happened to Aluminium? They were good and caught all manner of crud and didn't act like a foil for a wind hitting you sideways and knocking you off your bike like you were confetti! The distance between tyre and crud-catcher needs to be further apart to stop bunging it up - remember Crud happens - make sure your not one of them!
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