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review

Free Parable Design Monkii Cage

10
£13.75

VERDICT:

10
10
Simple, practical, and functional - and excellent value to boot
Weight: 
35g

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The Free Parable Design Monkii Cage is a bottle cage, so simple, and so practical you'll wonder why it's not been done before.

Attach the two plastic cleats to the mounts on the bike, and you can, relatively, simply slide the cage on and off the frame as required. Separating the bottle/cage from the studs is a neat touch, as the cage isn't imposing you can keep it attached to the bottle should you wish.

No big deal I hear you say, but that's not the really clever part. The Monkii cage, rather than use a solid cage like most others, uses flexible plastic and velcro to hold your cargo in place.

Yes, cargo. With its flexible sides and adjustable velcro you can secure almost any size and shape of bottle or can in place snuggly. With a maximum weight of 1.5kg, that's 1.5 litres of water. You can carry a bottle of wine or a can of Red Bull easily enough without fear of it either jumping out or rattling itself to death in side the cage!

It's not the raciest of designs, and probably not as aero as a £50 carbon bling-thing, but it's not designed to be. Its purpose is to carry things which may not fit in a normal cage, and it does that impeccably.

At less than £14 I'm really struggling to find fault with it. It's light, functional and super practical on both a commuting bike (hold your lunchtime soup) or on a touring bike (hold a 1.5 litre bottle of water). Money well spent.

Verdict

Simple, practical, and functional - and excellent value to boot

road.cc test report

Make and model: Free Parable Design Monkii Cage

Size tested: White

Tell us what the product is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?

A simple, removable, bottle cage which expands and contracts at the sides to hold liquids containers from 250ml (maybe less) all the way up to 1.5 litres. Smart Low-Tech is the company ethos, and they absolutely nail it with this.

Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?

Simple nylon and velcro-alike construction. Two cleats secure the cage to the frame and allow it to be removed as and when required.

Rate the product for quality of construction:
 
9/10

Simple plastic, very little to break, nothing has.

Rate the product for performance:
 
10/10

It does exactly what it should, with aplomb.

Rate the product for durability:
 
10/10

I've had small cans and large bottles in it, and thus far it's not wavered in its strength.

Rate the product for weight, if applicable:
 
9/10

34 grams is hardly a burden.

Rate the product for value:
 
10/10

Not for the racing machine, but for almost every other purpose it does a fantastic job for £12.

Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose

Spot-on.

Tell us what you particularly liked about the product

I could carry bottles and cans of varying sizes without breakages or the items jumping out on rubbish road surfaces.

Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product

If i had to choose, it doesn't match my bike's colour scheme.

Did you enjoy using the product? Yes.

Would you consider buying the product? Absolutely.

Would you recommend the product to a friend? For sure.

Anything further to say about the product in conclusion?

Great little product, smart design and sensible price.

Overall rating: 10/10

About the tester

Age: 37  Height: 176cm  Weight:

I usually ride: Rapide RC4, Raleigh SP Race, Hoffman BMX  My best bike is: Rapide RC4

I've been riding for: Under 5 years  I ride: Every day  I would class myself as: Experienced

I regularly do the following types of riding: time trialling, commuting, touring, sportives, general fitness riding, Adventure-packing, crossing-countries

 

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21 comments

Avatar
Initialised | 9 years ago
0 likes

Will it hold a 1.5l Thermos?

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CycleMiles replied to Initialised | 9 years ago
0 likes

You'll be at the manufactures recommended limits . . . but yes it will. Go for the monkii V cage version. More secure for higher weights and for off-road. http://www.cyclemiles.co.uk/shop/cycle-products/monkii-v-cage-bicycle-bo...

Avatar
massspike | 9 years ago
0 likes

Winter/snow biking season is coming and this may solve one of my problems: carrying a Thermos bottle full of hot chocolate in a bike cage. I've never been able to find one that fits the cage so I improvised by using lengths of old tubes to narrow the cage but it still rattles around.

Now I need to find a Canadian retailer.

Avatar
CycleMiles replied to massspike | 9 years ago
0 likes

Unfortunately, there are no monkii resellers in Canada. However, we ship monkiis all over the world, including beautiful Canada. Shipping is £5.50 (approx CAD$10.00) and takes less than 7 days . . . unless you live on Bank Island  3 velo [at] cyclemiles.co.uk

Avatar
CanAmSteve replied to massspike | 9 years ago
0 likes

"masspike" is that because you average 90 kph?  3

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massspike replied to CanAmSteve | 9 years ago
0 likes
CanAmSteve wrote:

"masspike" is that because you average 90 kph?  3

Took me awhile to figure this out...fortunately those 90kph (actually 110kph) winds were about 1000 km away. It was 28C with blue skies and no wind here -- perfect fall riding weather.

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macrophotofly | 9 years ago
0 likes

I understand the cage comes off with the bottle, but what stops the cage+bottle flying off the cleats everytime you brake heavily? Is there a release button or is it just friction that holds the cage to the cleats?
Very interesting idea and could be exactly what i am looking for to hold a small camera on a bike.....

Avatar
CycleMiles replied to macrophotofly | 9 years ago
0 likes

If you like the rough stuff, you'll be needing the monkii V cage. Bomb proof. http://www.cyclemiles.co.uk/shop/cycle-products/monkii-v-cage-bicycle-bo...

Avatar
CycleMiles | 9 years ago
0 likes

road.cc that was a nice surprise. 10/10 wow. Glad you liked it.  41

The monkii range is a complete system for carrying bottles (monkii cage & monkii V cage), tools (monkii V wedge tool roll) and stuff (monkii mono frame bag). There's even a monkii clip for bikes without bottle bosses or if you want to carry a monkii product elsewhere on your bicycle. e.g. under your seat, below your down tube even on your forks.

If you have more than one bike (which a few of us do . . ahem) you can just buy more monkii cleats and use your monkiis on all your bikes. "Simpils" as the annoying furry 'ferret' would say.

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CanAmSteve | 9 years ago
0 likes
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themartincox | 9 years ago
0 likes

re velcro - i used it more as a cargo hold instead of a drinking bottle type of cage. in that respect removal was not an issue for me. a level of dexterity is needed for drinking on the go.

re diameter of bottle - much wider than a Sig flask and you're gong to struggle with ergonomics i think. 1.5lt juice bottles are about its limit - and re the weight, I wouldn't want to go any higher anyway!

never had any accidents with it coming out

Avatar
CycleMiles replied to themartincox | 9 years ago
0 likes

Martin. Good to know you like your monkii! The monkii cage has a new big sister or brother now, (arrived just 3 weeks ago) called . . . wait for it . . . the gorilla cage.
http://www.cyclemiles.co.uk/shop/cyclemiles-featured/gorilla-cage-for-bi... Designed with bike packers in mind or anyone who just wants to carry bigger stuff using bottle mounts, 'Salsa Anything Cage' mounts or a monkii clip. If you'd like to take a look at one and let us know your thoughts . . good / bad / beautiful / ugly just let us know. velo [at] cyclemiles.co.uk

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jpanter | 9 years ago
0 likes

How secure does the cage feel in the plastic cleats? I've watched a video attaching it and detaching it and it looks like it could quite easily pop out, is there enough resistance there to keep a heavy bottle in place?  39

Avatar
james-o replied to jpanter | 9 years ago
0 likes
jpanter wrote:

How secure does the cage feel in the plastic cleats? I've watched a video attaching it and detaching it and it looks like it could quite easily pop out, is there enough resistance there to keep a heavy bottle in place?  39

A load of riders on bearbones bikepacking site rate the monkii cage for off-road use so it seems pretty secure. More secure than the copy I saw on ebay, an impulse-chance buy that was karma for buying a cheap copy of a good product.. it is near-useless : )

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truffy | 9 years ago
0 likes

Velcro strap not so practical for drinking on the move though.

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dave atkinson replied to truffy | 9 years ago
0 likes
truffy wrote:

Velcro strap not so practical for drinking on the move though.

you're kind of missing the point, which is that the velcro and cage come off the bike with the bottle

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jacknorell | 9 years ago
0 likes

I guess you may need to mind the tube thickness? Some very thin ones might not take the load, esp side to side?

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Bez | 9 years ago
0 likes

(Pssst… You've spelt the brand name wrong.)  3

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honesty | 9 years ago
0 likes

Whats the maximum diameter it will hold? Cant seem to find that anywhere, but would be really interested if it would hold my klean kanteen 64oz bottle.

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CycleMiles replied to honesty | 9 years ago
0 likes

Yep. It will carry your Kleen Kanteen with ease. We recommend the monkii V cage for your purposes as with the extra potential weight of 64oz (1900ml) it offers 'bomb proof' carrying reliability. Particularly if you are heading off-road and it gets a little more bumpy than usual. http://www.cyclemiles.co.uk/shop/cycle-products/monkii-v-cage-bicycle-bo...

Avatar
Bez | 9 years ago
0 likes

Ooh. That's really quite the thing as a There When You Need It For Unexpectedly Necessary Stuff Holder on the third bottle cage on the tourer.

I see they do a bag to fit the cleats, too. Nice.

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