Welcome to Monday’s live blog, with Jack Sexty, Simon MacMichael and the rest of the team.
- News

Live blog: Taxpayers’ Alliance think speeding fines are a tax (and 20mph makes “no difference” to road safety); Skoda unveil concept car for cyclists; Porn Pedallers hosting new kit launch event in London; £125k Paul Smith x Rapha jersey on eBay +more
SUMMARY

ICYMI - weekend-catch-up
Here are some of our top stories from the weekend in case you’ve been neglecting us since Friday…
ASO “don’t really seem to care much about women’s cycling” says Joanna Rowsell Shand
£400k damages for family of triathlete killed in pothole crash
Never mind the bollocks...


…here’s a load of mountain bikes in South Wales spotted flaunting their Bike Balls. They’re available from a selection of retailers with a puerile sense of humour nationwide…
Paul Smith x Rapha jersey pops up on ebay for £125,000. Again...


We can only assume the last auction wasn’t successful, because once more we’ve spotted this jersey described as “a piece of cycling history” pop up on ebay for the princely sum of £125,000. While it’s quite nice we just can’t see that it’s nice enough to cost the same as a house, which got us thinking… why is the seller asking for such an extortionate amount? Is he/she hoping someone very rich and gullible will come along, or is there more to the story? If miraculously the seller happens to be reading this, or anyone can shed any light, do let us know in the comments!
Porn Pedallers launching their new jersey on 20th June... and are inviting you to go to a strip club with them afterwards to celebrate


What goes on at a kit launch party for a cycling team made up of “a ramshackle bunch of cycling enthusiasts who happen to work in or around the UK adult entertainment industry”? Who knows, but if you’re lucky enough to be on the guest list you can find out at Look Mum No Hands! on 20th June for the Porn Pedallers’ new kit launch party. It’s been made by Le Col, and Porn Pedallers also donate £10 of each sale of their branded kit to the Terrence Higgins Trust. While the event is by invitation only, anyone can go along to the after-party at Platinum Lace strip club on Leicester Square from 10.30pm onwards – info above.
Riding Ritchey's Swiss Cross
David has just been testing Ritchey’s new Swiss Cross, check out what he has to say about it in his video review below.
Anyone else with the Monday blues?
Monday feeling
@therussellellis pic.twitter.com/C3bLTuRqmP
— Elia Viviani (@eliaviviani) June 10, 2019
DealClincher: 35% off 3T Exploro Team Rival Gravel Bike


Fancy a wider-tyre bike that is still incredibly fast on the road?
3T’s Exploro is currently down to a very tempting £2,550 with a Rival 1X groupset, Fulcrum wheels, WTB 47mm Road Plus TCS tyres and 3T finishing kit.
Nikki Brammeier announces pro cycling retirement the day after sharing news of pregnancy
Today I’m announcing my retirement from professional cycling. Not many athletes get to end their career as current National champion, fit, healthy & still loving their sport, but that’s how i’de like to end mine Please read more here https://t.co/ZO1L9g4ieb
— Nikki Brammeier (@NikkiBrammeier) June 10, 2019
The 32-year-old current national cyclocross champion said she wanted ‘to end on a high’, calling time on her career shortly after announcing she is expecting her first child with husband Matt Brammeier, himself a former pro and now a cycling coach.
Look launch Tour de France edition Carbon Ceramic Titanium pedals


The pedal of choice for riders such as Nairo Quintana and Romain Bardet for this year’s Tour, this is Look’s top-of-the-range road racing pedal given a Tour de France makeover. It has a ceramic bearings under the pedal platform for the ultimate in smoothness and a titanium axle, and weighs in at just 95g per pedal.
Only 1,700 units of the special edition coloured versions will be up for sale worldwide at €290.90, after which a standard version will be available later in the year. Head over to Look’s website for more deets.
Skoda launch a car for cyclists
Long story short, it has a roof rack and a drinks cooler.
But what else makes a car a “cyclist’s car”? Well, according to Skoda, you’ll need to fit it out with a pressure washer for cleaning off some amazingly muddy road bikes.
Then obviously, you’ll want to strip off in a car park and do your laundry before you get home to your washing machine. So you’ll be needing a washing machine in the boot. They don’t specify how you’ll dry the kit, but we’re sure it’ll be fine tied to the aerial…
Who needs seats anyway? You’ll obviously want to leave one of your children at home so that your bike can ride along in the car. Then be sure to take your other two bikes on the roof rack.
But oh gosh! A mechanical has befallen you en route. Not to worry! You’ve got a specific place for a toolbox. You could never just put that in the boot.
If you’re still thinking ‘wow! This is the car for me’, then, unfortunately, it’s just a concept car. So sad, but don’t worry, you can still have “a KAROQ Velo inspired accessory package, which includes a ŠKODA Multi-tool, ŠKODA Bicycle tyre pump and bracket and ŠKODA Bicycle Lights”. Available to order from local ŠKODA Retailers.
Have Skoda not heard of simply riding from home?
Plans to relax UK's £1,000 Cycle to Work limit to make it easier to buy e-bikes announced by Government's cycling minister


The latest changes to the Cycle to Work scheme could mean great news for e-bikers and those considering ditching the car and investing in an e-bike for the commute – as the government has outlined plans to make it easier for employers to provide bikes and equipment, including e-bikes, worth over the current £1,000 limit. Full story on eBikeTips.
Full protected cycle lane for Kew Road in Richmond?
Bit of Monday morning news for you, from this week’s “Active Travel Group” meeting at @LBRUT …
Kew Road is likely to get full protected cycling. #NotACarPark pic.twitter.com/fpKky8r9CW
— Richmond Cycling (@RichmondCycling) June 10, 2019
It was announced in a Richmond council meeting today that the busy road is set for a full protected cycle lane, which will hopefully make scenes like the one in the image above a thing of the past…
Five cool things


A luxurious bag handmade in Scotland, Hunt’s new super wide gravel wheels and a handy tool storage solution from Topeak make our kit round-up this week. Read all about them here.
A group calling themselves the 'Taxpayers' Alliance' don't appear to know the difference between tax and a fine
Another day, another tax. Nice one @SadiqKhan #NoMoreTaxes pic.twitter.com/8d1VffZNk3
— TaxPayers’ Alliance (@the_tpa) June 9, 2019
You may have heard of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, which claims to be a “non-partisan grassroots campaign for lower taxes and government transparency” but in reality is a right-wing lobby group that has received hundreds of thousands of pounds in funding from the US; it is often wheeled out on BBC News to provide [checks notes] balance on stories about increased public psending – such as on cycle lanes.
Today, it has attracted criticism by describing fines for motorists breaking new 20mph limits in London as a ‘tax’ – while also suggesting there is no evidence that lower speed limits save lives (spoiler – they do, and there is a wealth of studies to back that up). Cue the rightfully cutting and sarcastic stream of replies …
I’ve literally never been hit with a speeding fine. Not once, in over twenty years. Am I a tax evader?
— Ned Boulting (@nedboulting) June 10, 2019
Perhaps you should rename yourselves FinePayers’ Alliance.
— Richard Hallett (@hallettrichard) June 9, 2019
It isn’t a tax you buffoons. Don’t want to pay it, don’t exceed the speed limit. I’m a taxpayer and you do not speak for me.
— Dan Jarvis (@worldcupdan) June 9, 2019
Looking at the TaxPayer’s Alliance website they appear to be a legitimate operation with an 18-strong team, although we’re not too sure who’s funding them. Most of their tweets and blog posts seem to read like something from a Jacob Rees-Mogg manifesto, if such a thing existed, with one praising Donald Trump’s lowering of taxes for big businesses in the US and another claiming that cutting taxes for corporations like Amazon would lead to economic growth in the UK.
Cycle Superswimway
SPLASH!
I cycled from Utrecht to Nijmegen a few years ago in much heavier rain, through rural, hilly forests and didn't see a single puddle on the smooth cycleways, never mind anything even close to this deep
— Hackney Cyclist (@Hackneycyclist) June 10, 2019
Help us to bring you the best cycling content
If you’ve enjoyed this article, then please consider subscribing to road.cc from as little as £1.99. Our mission is to bring you all the news that’s relevant to you as a cyclist, independent reviews, impartial buying advice and more. Your subscription will help us to do more.
20 Comments
Read more...
Read more...
Read more...
Latest Comments
"All that's required is an to roads policing" - that's a big all... Although no doubt the "idiots just keep coming" aspect does apply: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz9lel2wz93o "Man charged after car crashes through bowling alley" - luckily they only skittled over skittles.
Almost any change to roads and streets is accompanied by a period of heightened danger, and in the UK "look out for cyclists" will need to be learned... practically. And over the time it takes for cyclists to become a regular feature. OTOH once (if...) good designs are in and frequent enough such that drivers encounter them AND the cyclists on them regularly (another big if) I don't think they should be much more difficult than a footway to deal with. These things are all over NL - don't have the collision stats but they should. (NL isn't perfect but collecting info on the safety of designs to feed back into better designs as required is part of the "sustainable safety" philosophy - if they're really a killer I think they'd be altering these.)
I'm in the happy position of agreeing with everybody here! I've never considered a bike with a stand, yet I'm impressed by the ingenuity and adaptability of this axle. I tow a Yak Bob with a Robert Axle, employing my El Cheapo Vitus gravel bike and I just have to be very careful where I stop. Hedges are generally a dead loss, and I seek walls, telegraph poles and signposts and generally lean the widest part of the Bob against it. One very awkward task is removing the two steel pins which lock the trailer arms onto the special mounting slots on the Robert axle, and when you have one out, the sodding weight in the trailer can twist the whole caboodle and bend the Bob fitting before you can get the other out and unhitch. I doubt if a stand would help with that. You can imagine that this combo is a real pain when you have to get it over the bridge at railway stations, and it nearly resulted in Merseyrail nearly parting me and the trailer on the platform from the bike on the train. It's a long story for another time. Another axle example recently featured on here, with a 12mm front axle bearing the Herculean weight limit of a monster American front rack.
This has nothing to do with the type of bike - it's the type of behaviour that's the problem. Banning the sale of such bikes will not curtail the behaviour. They'll just find another type of vehicle and continue to drive dangerously as there's such a lack of enforcement. I'd sooner see them ban the bally. But really, all that's required is an improvement to roads policing.
The EAPC Bill is welcome, but full of holes. What's to stop an overpowered but temporarily limited e-bike being sold and subsequently delimited? This is often a trivial process.
@KiwiMike Yeah, in my over four decades of riding all over Europe I've never 'been for a ride in the countryside'. That must be it. Or, and I know this is a wild concept, you just accept that I just voiced my personal experiences and never missed a kickstand, like I wrote. Anyway, what's the big horror of laying your bike on its side for the very few occasions where there is nothing to lean your bike against?
They may have looked, but did they see?
Ds2025: where they are going wrong is that they are crushing the motorbike rather than the person sat on top of it. If they did the latter this issue would be solved in less than 24 hours.
I came this way today with the car boot sale in operation. There was a marshal at the entrance, who stopped a car turning right across the cycleway as I was approaching. So that certainly works. I think it necessary for the marshal to be there, I couldn't say if the driver would have turned if he hadn't been there but you always have to suspect the worst. Unfortunately there is no marshal at the exit, and there was certainly a car stopped across the cycleway as I was approaching it. But he pulled onto the road before I reached it, and the following car stayed off the cycleway as I went through. Ideally there should have been a marshal there too. On the whole, though, it's a really high standard piece of infrastructure. Just a pity it doesn't extend a bit further.
“absolute carnage” So right! Just look at the bodies piled up, blood running in the gutters and injured people limping away. It's a bit of a problem with a road, delaying some people for minutes at a time: it isn't carnage, let alone 'absolute carnage'. Anyone who exaggerates so ridiculously really shouldn't be allowed to comment in public, unless they want to demonstrate their idiocy to all and sundry.
20 thoughts on “Live blog: Taxpayers’ Alliance think speeding fines are a tax (and 20mph makes “no difference” to road safety); Skoda unveil concept car for cyclists; Porn Pedallers hosting new kit launch event in London; £125k Paul Smith x Rapha jersey on eBay +more”
Skoda previosuly offered a
Skoda previously offered a two bike internal fork clamp mount for the Yeti. Not everyone has kids. I don’t. So the internal bike rack comes in very handy and it’s safer than on the roof.
I saw the Skoda story via
I saw the Skoda story via ‘influencers’ on social media who took it for a test spin. Zzzzzzz.
Nothing more nausiating than people fawning over brands because they got a few bits of free kit etc. I’ve unfollowed most of the people that are now doing this sort of gig.
There was a previous LiveBlog
There was a previous LiveBlog that featured a bit of victim blaming from skoda
https://road.cc/content/news/259906-live-blog-mp-calls-minister-cycling-cabinet-hygiene-sainsburys-kicks-out-cyclist
and the specific website
A car with a washing machine,
A car with a washing machine, well that’s a new one on me.
Good news for Kew Road, and
Good news for Kew Road, and looking at the tweets a lot of great stuff about to happen in Richmond.
I’d quite like a cycling
I’d quite like a cycling specific car, preferably one that comes with a driver willing to hand fresh cool bottles and food out of the window, give me a new wheel when I puncture, carry the endless supply of wet weather gear I seem to carry in Scotland, oh and drive at a 25mph in front of me for all of those long drags home into a block headwind…
I’ve got VW. It’s on its
I’ve got VW. It’s on its third turbo. It’s needed two new brake calipers, the central locking keeps going faulty, an electric window packed up, it’s required work to the ABS, a new fuel filter housing. The alloy wheels corrode and the bodywork is rusting.
So much for German engineering. Somehow, if it were a Citroën, I would not be so piqued by the rubbish quality.
So for ferrying bikes, maybe a Citroën Berlingo next time. Can’t be worse than a VW!
Sriracha wrote:
Though I no longer drive it (parked in the garage for the last 20 months) my Passat estate has been brilliant, 2001 B5.5 model, the only issue was the clogging up of the stupidly placed drain plug under the battery (which is a bstd to get out) that causes the passenger footwell to get wet if you don’t periodically unblock it.
Other than that I found it to be a bloody brilliant car, same turbo after 130k, no clutch problems, replaced an electric window internals for £50 by buying the whole thing and 30 mins work by a local garage but that was when it was 120k/14yrs old. Some say those PD engines are just getting run in at 100k and I tend to agree, I had an Isuzu engined Astra before that with a garret turbo, that was bombproof as well, maybe I’ve just been lucky.
As a bike carrier it’s superb, always inside, 2up you can carry two bikes and absolutely loads of kit with room to spare, far more than the vast majority of SUVs, IF I ever replaced it/decided to drive again, I would want a large estate and I would very likely consider another Passat.
The only good car is a
The only good car is a crushed car.
Gizzard wrote:
I disagree…
hawkinspeter wrote:
I disagree…
— Gizzard
In a nutshell, that is rather a tasty car interior!
The only good car is a
The only good car is a crushed car.
The only good car is a
The only good car is a crushed car.
What’s a protected cycle lane
What’s a protected cycle lane?
Presumably a bit more than a bit of signage.
Tax Payers’ Alliance? Given
Tax Payers’ Alliance? Given who funds them, shouldn’t that be the Tax Avoiders’ Alliance?
Are these ‘tax’ dodgers
Are these ‘tax’ dodgers supported by the US Embassy? I really don’t understand the thinking of the far right; they really just want to sit in their castles whilst the world dissolves around them.
Organon wrote:
Not funded by the US state, but by US ‘special interest groups’.
Make the world Merica, and all that.
Small state politics – lower taxes, the state has no income so cannot pay for any social type stuff. Health and social care and law enforcement all paid for by private subscription or insurance, the rich can afford it so they don’t care. Any taxes are an imposition on the freedom of the rich to become richer, so should be done away with.
(Yes, the poor will get poorer, and can’t afford the insurance, and the state isn’t there as a safety net or to pay police or empty the bins, but that’s just the law of the jungle or something isn’t it? What are you: some sort of communist?)
brooksby wrote:
Comrade!
(No subject)
I believe it is time to trial
I believe it is time to test speed safety once and for all. Let’s experiment by picking one street in London, completely at random, and switching between enforcing a return to the days of cars having to drive behind a man waving a flag, and on alternate days setting a minimum speed limit of 50mph. Then, after say ten years of recording how many people are knocked down under each condition, we’ll have plenty of data to draw some conclusions. I’ve got a map with me now, and I’m closing my eyes and pointing… Oh, look at that, my finger has landed on Tufton Street, what a coincidence.