Hmmm, sorry for both your crashes, I hope you are on the mend.
The first sounds like a typical 'high side' crash, where the bike trips over the front wheel. Joseba Beloki's career-ending TdF crash is one of those.
The second is more like a series of over-corrections (it's easy to criticise from a chair, we've all done them and either crashed or headed off into the woods).
A true speed wobble (shimmy) is a shaking of the bars, cured generally by damping by putting your knee against the top tube. Heavy riders on bikes with light front wheels seem worse affected.
The first sounds like a typical 'high side' crash, where the bike trips over the front wheel. Joseba Beloki's career-ending TdF crash is one of those.
The second is more like a series of over-corrections (it's easy to criticise from a chair, we've all done them and either crashed or headed off into the woods).
A true speed wobble (shimmy) is a shaking of the bars, cured generally by damping by putting your knee against the top tube. Heavy riders on bikes with light front wheels seem worse affected.
Speed wobbles: How they start and how to stop them - CyclingTips
You finish climbing, crest the hill, then start flying down the other side. And then, out of nowhere, it happens. You’re not riding recklessly; you’re not even pedalling. But suddenly, as you pick up speed, the bike takes on a life of its own. What starts as a small wobble quickly becomes much...
cyclingtips.com
Last edited: