|
|
Average Rating
|
3.62/5
|
|
# of Reviews
|
21
|
|
MSRP
|
$ 140.00
|
|
Weight
|
|
|
More Products from Crank Bros.
Submit a Review
|
|
|
Description:2-sided pedal with 4-sided entry, large magnesium platform and chromoly spindle
platform: magnesium
wings: carbon steel
spindle: chromoly
armor / traction plates: stainless steel. replaceable; extra set included with longer teeth for more traction
warranty: 2 years
stack height: 15.2mm
release angle: 15 or 20 degrees, variable with cleat placement
cleats: standard egg beater cleats. 1 pair included with pedals.
core egg beater technology: simple, reliable design, 4-sided entry, excellent mud clearance, inherently light-weight, easy to maintain and rebuild
colors: silver, orange
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Buy and Sell the Mallet M from our Classifieds.
|
Shop for Similar Products
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Submitted by
Jim
a Cross Country Rider
from Santaquin, UT, USA Date Reviewed: May 21, 2008 | | Favorite Trail: | Blackhawk | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$40.00 | | Purchased At: | bikenashbar.com | | Strengths: | Ease of entry and release mud shedding Ride clipless or just on platform | | Weaknesses: | Heavy | | Similar Products Used: | Time ATAC Alium | | Bike Setup: | Specialized FSR XC | | Bottom Line: | I love these pedals! I went clipless with the Time ATAC and found them VERY difficult to get out of. As a result I found myself on the ground more times than I care to remember. The Crank Brothers pedals are VERY easy to get in and out of and as a result I have found my old, reckless self out on the trail again. I love these pedals and would recommend them to anyone! | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Jon Benner
a Cross Country Rider
from Antwerp, NY USA Date Reviewed: May 1, 2008 | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$125.00 | | Purchased At: | Blueskycycling.com | | Strengths: | Low weight Great construction proven and reliable eggbeater clipless interface Great tracktion | | Weaknesses: | Need more color choices! Would have been nice to ship with an extra set of pins | | Similar Products Used: | Eggbeater SL pedals Quattro SL road pedals | | Bike Setup: | KHS Solo one, Sun rims, Kenda tires, Avid BB7 185/160mm, flak jacket, speed dial SL setup, Rockshox Duke SL fork.. | | Bottom Line: | This is a review for the newest 2008 Mallet 2 models. I was curious how much I'd like these pedals before ordering. I wanted something I could ride with normal street shoes while playing around in my pump track and around town. I also wanted a clipless pedal with a low weight. So my options were a little limited. I have rode Eggbeaters for 3 years now and I will likely never ride anything else. These pedals are great because for their size they're very light weight. I'm happy with the traction in regular shoes. You can notice the Eggbeater a little but it's not that troublesome. While clipping in I found I needed one shim to make my current shoes work. After the shim I was golden. It's a solid interface with a little more area for my feet. I love these pedals so far! | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Brad
a Weekend Warrior
from Wisconsin Date Reviewed: April 13, 2008 | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$90.00 | | Purchased At: | ebay | | Strengths: | Very light, eggbeater design, sheds mud, good traction pins | | Weaknesses: | the pins are either too low to ride with regular shoes or too high to ride clipless | | Similar Products Used: | cheapos, shimano 545s | | Bike Setup: | XC | | Bottom Line: | I have yet to use them clipless because my shoes don't work too well with them. You have to have shoes with not a lot of tread sticking out or else they don't clip in. These are very light and shed mud like nothing. I have heard great reviews about the eggbeater system, but for now I like them with just regular shoes. The adjustable pins are great, mine are way out so they grip to my shoes very nice. I like these a lot, and eventually I will use the clipless part. I have the 2008 mallet 2's, which are somewhat different from the 2007 mallet m's. If you could not adjust the pins (like the 07's) they would not be very good with regular shoes. the butterfly sticks up too much in the middle, making that what your shoe will touch. you can ride them around town, but if you are doing serious mtbing this would not work very well with the 2007's. These are great for clipless and platforms, just make sure you get the 2008's with the adjustable pins. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Knotty boy
a Downhiller
from Australia Date Reviewed: April 3, 2008 | | Duration Product Used: | 2 Years | | Price Paid: |
$80.00 | | Purchased At: | Friend | | Strengths: | light, large platform, ability drag your foot backwards to clip in. | | Weaknesses: | Very weak, design flaw that has the bars exposed on the under side of the pedal | | Similar Products Used: | Shimano | | Bike Setup: | Giant Glory DH | | Bottom Line: | I've used these pedals for about 2 years now and feel I've given them a good enough go. I first had a pair of Mallet C's and clipped the underside of them on a rock. This resulted in one of the clip in bars snapping. Once I thought was just bad luck, but I brought a pair of Mallet M's from a friend and now have 3 out of 4 pedals broken with the same problem. I only ride downhill and obviously in rocky places. If the impact is light enough that I don't crash and fall off my bike then I expect the pedal to be able to handle it. I like giving something different a try, but will go back to Shimano which can take a lot more abuse and have a more positive action with adjustable spring tension. Crank bros are great if you are sponsored and get pedals in packs of ten. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Bomber
a Weekend Warrior
from Columbus, Ohio Date Reviewed: March 6, 2008 | | Favorite Trail: | Gooseberry Mesa | | Duration Product Used: | More than 3 years | | Price Paid: |
$80.00 | | Purchased At: | On line | | Strengths: | Theyre eggbeaters | | Weaknesses: | None that I have witnessed | | Similar Products Used: | Eggbeater SL | | Bike Setup: | Turner 5 Spot | | Bottom Line: | This is a great product. As for those who have had issues with bearings, then sorry about your luck. You run the same risk as everyone else getting a bad bearing. Bearing are manufactured by other companies, not the pedal manufacturer. So, if the pedal company is using a second rate bearing, then shame on them. But it costs $5 at the most to replace the bearings. For the guy who had peices of his bearing get stuck on the inside of his pedal, go buy an o'ring remover. It should be small enough and strong enough to clean out any debris. As for this pedal and the product its been great. I dont use it much for cross country, because of its size. I found the pedal would get in the way (Come into contact with more stuff on the trail) when pedaling. The Eggbeater SL's are great and dont hit anything on the trail. This pedal is great for first timers to the Clipless world due to the huge platform. Thats why I bought them. Once I got use to clipless pedals I bought the eggbeaters. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Jeremy Blanchard
a Downhiller
from Hong Kong Date Reviewed: March 19, 2007 | | Favorite Trail: | Tai Mo Shan | | Duration Product Used: | 1 Year | | Price Paid: |
$110.00 | | Purchased At: | Bicycle World | | Strengths: | Solid platform with clip in, solid positive engagement. handles knocks well. | | Weaknesses: | none so far except maybe not so light. | | Similar Products Used: | shimano, egg beaters. | | Bike Setup: | SC Nomad Van/ DHX Coil & SC Chameleon ZI Light & SC VP Free 888RCX2 | | Bottom Line: | These pedals really do it for me. I have tried with flatties but these give me aer ally assured feeling. i have run them trouble free on three different bikes for over a year and so far no issue. I run them for XC trails and more agressive Trails, DH's and they are excellent, despite many contacts with Terra Firmer they are still running well.
| Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Ray
a Weekend Warrior
from Puyallup, WA Date Reviewed: February 17, 2007 | | Favorite Trail: | skookum flats | | Duration Product Used: | 3 months | | Price Paid: |
$65.00 | | Purchased At: | Ebay | | Strengths: | Reliable, strong. | | Weaknesses: | None. | | Similar Products Used: | Mallet C, Eggbeater | | Bottom Line: | This is my third set of pedals from Crank Bros. I've liked them so much I keep putting them on my bikes. Started with the eggbeaters, and switched to the mallet c's about two years ago. Just got a new 29er and put on the Mallet M's. Not much mileage on these yet, but I have 100's & 100's on the eggbeaters and Mallet C's. These pedals have been very robust and can take a ton of hard use / abuse. I am surprised to read that others have had them break??? I'm just over 200 pounds and have never had a problem with these. Lots of jumps / drops, lot's of miles in mud and grit, no issues.
| Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Fabricio Fracchia
a Weekend Warrior
from Caracas,Venezuela Date Reviewed: September 24, 2006 | | Favorite Trail: | all | | Duration Product Used: | 1 Year | | Price Paid: |
$89.00 | | Purchased At: | Airbomb | | Strengths: | Hold very good if you want to ride without clipless shoes, good movement of the foot when clipped in | | Weaknesses: | I can't say nothing bad about them, I used in my all mountain in agresive riding and only suffered one damaged to one of the for side clips, but the CB warranty covered. | | Similar Products Used: | shimano , time | | Bike Setup: | SC Blur LT, Talas 36RC2, RP3, full XT. | | Bottom Line: | the problem was solved so good that the broken clip is nothing, the guys there are awesome. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Mr.ED
a Weekend Warrior
from Canuck Date Reviewed: August 25, 2006 | | Duration Product Used: | More than 3 years | | Strengths: | Very forgiving to get back in and out.Mud and snow are a joke for these pedals.By the way maintenance is very easy but frequent if you don`t want premature wear.I ryde Bromont a lot and Rigaud`s( secret trails )These pedals are good,Period | | Weaknesses: | Wears fast (cleats)but extremely precise (once cleats are set properly,trim,shim and patience.) | | Similar Products Used: | Shimano all the way since forever.they never fail but don`t clip in mud and snow | | Bike Setup: | 03`Devinci Banzai very well tuned and modified | | Bottom Line: | Bottom line is I`m a great mechanic and anything that gets abused will not last forever and high end stuff demands higher end maintenance .Or find a good shop and stop winning and RYDE . | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
ben
a Racer
from sydney Date Reviewed: August 11, 2006 | | Favorite Trail: | western commision track | | Duration Product Used: | 6 months | | Price Paid: |
$80.00 | | Purchased At: | ebay | | Strengths: | versatility, work well when new, light for this type pedal
| | Weaknesses: | same as last reviewer in the my bearing cartridge blew up and has left a small fragment in the pedal so i cant install new bearings so all i can do is throw the pedal away | | Bike Setup: | santa cruz blur, xtr build f100x | | Bottom Line: | i wasnt going to write this review, but it seems to be a repeating prob with me having the exact same issue as previous reviewer. at first i thought tis pedal was great due to the versatility of using with clipless shoes or just riding on thre street in sports shoes, its jst a shame they dont hold together for an acceptable amount of time my bearings blew without warning, seems to be a manufacturing problem as its not a on off.
| Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
johnny h
a
from uk Date Reviewed: August 10, 2006 | | Duration Product Used: | 1 Year | | Strengths: | weight | | Weaknesses: | reliability | | Similar Products Used: | shimano | | Bike Setup: | 5 spot | | Bottom Line: | these pedals work well when new but they soon show their weakness. theyve been back to the shop twice and are about to go back again. first time the bearings collapsed and the second time it was the clip-in (eggbeater) system went tits-up ! peaty must have a new pair every ride ! at least they come with a two year warranty and the servie from the distributors (2 pure ) has been excellent. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
San Juan
a Cross Country Rider
from Durango Date Reviewed: June 3, 2006 | | Favorite Trail: | The CT of course | | Duration Product Used: | 3 months | | Price Paid: |
$50.00 | | Purchased At: | ebay | | Strengths: | I never really liked these things. | | Weaknesses: | My right pedal spontaneoulsy flew off my bike after about 3 months. | | Bottom Line: | Having a pedal come off your bike can be pretty frightening... especially considering what would have happened if I didn't stop on the downhill I was riding. I stopped because the pedal felt wierd, and it came right off. These pedals are not tough, and they have no real positive engagement. They were over-hyped, and they are not a good pedal. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Matt Locher
a Weekend Warrior
from Zürich Swizterland Date Reviewed: May 4, 2006 | | Favorite Trail: | single trails with flow | | Duration Product Used: | 3 months | | Strengths: | easy to get into the pedals, nice concept, weight | | Weaknesses: | !!stength!! I mounted those pedals on my Spezialised Enduro bike and after using them about 10 times, one pedal just broke (the spindel broke) while i was riding a steep uphill. This freakde me out - I also have those pedals on my downhill bike. I exchanged everything to Shimano.
my weight is 230lbs muscle not fat but a pedal should still hold up....! | | Similar Products Used: | Shimano | | Bottom Line: | They have a serious design safety issue | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Justin
a Weekend Warrior
from St. Louis, MO, USA Date Reviewed: December 3, 2005 | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Purchased At: | Ebay! | | Strengths: | The first time anyone got platform/clipless right, smooth release, very comfortable to ride, and great grip without cleats for technical stuff and around campus. | | Weaknesses: | Tricky to clip into (I'm a novice, but SPD's were still easier), overly fluorescent orange paint is pretty much chalk. | | Similar Products Used: | Shimano M545 Combo, generic downhill shin skinners | | Bike Setup: | 2002 K2 Zed Team, XTR stuff, F80X, Specialized Taho shoes | | Bottom Line: | This is my one and only bike, so I needed pedals that work for XC and around campus, and these fit the bill. Great grip when you need it, even with street shoes, and the egg beater mechanism stays out of the way. The flip side is that it's hard to find when you need it, and I'm still not entirely used to clipping in. Ride quality is great and release is very natural after a few embarrassing crashes. Heavy suckers, even in the pricy magnesium version, but big surprise. Overall, I'd rather have stable, comfortable, easy to escape pedals than super light deathtraps. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
B Griffith
a Weekend Warrior
from Columbus, OH Date Reviewed: June 20, 2005 | | Favorite Trail: | any trail | | Duration Product Used: | 6 months | | Price Paid: |
$80.00 | | Purchased At: | Bike shop on ebay | | Strengths: | Easy clip in and out Light for the size of pedal Great for down hill riding. | | Weaknesses: | Overall size is too big for XC. Hit the dirt quite a bit when pedaling on hill sides. Get the smaller eggbeater type. | | Similar Products Used: | Only style used. Will purchase Eggbeater style for XC and use the mallet M for down hill. | | Bike Setup: | Jamis XLT 2.0 Frame with Swinger 4 way and Z1 FR Marzocchi fork. | | Bottom Line: | Great product. Just needs to be used more for down hill than XC. It works great on flatter rides, but do tend to hit more obsticles while riding technical areas. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
pete disbury
a Weekend Warrior
from walnut creek, ca, usa Date Reviewed: May 8, 2005 | | Favorite Trail: | gravity edge | | Duration Product Used: | 3 months | | Price Paid: |
$80.00 | | Purchased At: | perfection cyclery | | Strengths: | Stay locked in when in and they look cool, feel light, have interchangable cleat bolts for different size cleat mounts. | | Weaknesses: | Unclip during jumping sessions, minor drops such as 3-4 feet they will again pop loose. This is down right unacceptable and bloody dangerous too. When hammering on a climb they will pop loose and this makes me nervous. Crank Bros need to change this or it could be a law suit later on from someone. | | Similar Products Used: | Time Z control, Time Alium both awesome pedals and easy to clip in and out of. I will switch to the Time's. | | Bike Setup: | Weyless 67 with spv 4way coil shock, Pike Race fork with u-turn, Hope Big Un Hub on Singletrack rims, Avid mechanical 8in brakes, thomson front and rear, Kenda Kinetics 2.35 am tires, Holzfeller cranks, XT drivetrain, king headset, Answer protaper handlebar, odi grips and Wtb power v saddle. | | Bottom Line: | Great looking pedals, light, certain amount of float for the shoes,but they unclip during uncertain and unexpected times which make them too unpredictable. A shame because I initially liked them and had heard good things about them. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
DBR
a Racer
from DC Date Reviewed: September 15, 2004 | | Duration Product Used: | 3 months | | Strengths: | -Good entry/release when new -Excellent mud-shedding ability -Light -Magnesium body holds up fine | | Weaknesses: | -Unacceptable durability -Cleats wear out extremely fast -Spindles bend/break -Grip plates bend and peel off (minor annoyance) | | Similar Products Used: | Pretty much everything else clipless. | | Bike Setup: | DH race | | Bottom Line: | They're great when they're new, I'll say that much. Easy to get in and out of, low-profile, and few moving parts makes for a great concept.
Unfortunately, these pedals, which might seem to be an ideal DH pedal (a TON of DH pro's seem to be sponsored by Crank Bros.), fall far short of that goal. Within one month of heavy use, I had bent both spindles. Then one of them snapped. Crank Bros. was excellent about getting me new spindles and rebuild kits (lost bushings/seals when the spindle snapped), no questions asked. I suspect it's becoming a full-time job sending out spindles and bearing kits.
After the new spindles were installed, I made it another 2 weeks or so before the cleats became so worn out that they would no longer hold onto the pedal. I could unclip by pulling straight up. Totally unacceptable, I know they're brass, but still -- less than 2 months?
Bottom line is -- if you ride hard, or ride often, look elsewhere. I weigh about 195 lbs and race Ex. DH, so I put a decent amount of stress on my stuff, and I ride frequently. A lot of clipping in/out will toast the cleats REALLY fast. I don't know what to say about the spindles; the 2nd pair is still going strong after all of 3 rides but I expect them to start drooping any time soon. For what it's worth, I know a great number of people (DH'ers) experiencing the same spindle problems as I.
Simply put, Crank Bro's needs to take a long, hard look at these pedals and re-assess their suitability for DH use; it needs a beefier spindle, and a steel cleat would be wonderful. I'd just as soon do away with the steel grip plates as well, they seem to be of no value other than to get folded over by rocks. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Denis
a Weekend Warrior
from Alameda, CA, USA Date Reviewed: September 11, 2004 | | Favorite Trail: | ones you can't ride | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$109.00 | | Purchased At: | universal cycles | | Strengths: | light construction, very easy to clip in and out with the egg beater system. the 2005 model is made of magnesium and the color is grey, not orange. dual insertion is great, and the platform size is generous. it does the job it is expected to do. | | Weaknesses: | the springs stick out a bit so when the pedal is used with the cleat dis-engaged, there is a bit of interference, which is resolved by positioning the foot forward of the spring. that is very confortable going uphill. it is less so going downhill | | Similar Products Used: | well go clipless from few years back | | Bike Setup: | Santa Cruz Superlight | | Bottom Line: | I recommend to remove the metal guards and their screws which saves a tremenduous amount of weight. that way, this pedal beats the Time Z system hands down with respect to weight. in fact it is barely heavier than my previous magnesium platforms.
very good design. a bit pricey for pedals | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Denis
a
from Alameda, CA USA Date Reviewed: September 9, 2004 | | Favorite Trail: | the one you can't ride | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$110.00 | | Purchased At: | Universal Cycles | | Strengths: | very well packaged product, it shows some respect for the customer although at that price point I would not expect less. robust and efficient design. quite a bit lighter than the Time Z control pedals, specially after removing the 4 metal guards and screws which are useless but heavy. no learning curve was required. does the job I expected. clipping in and out is a breeze., I did use one of the 2 shims per shoe that was provided and I followed the instructions that advises a lesser float but greater angle of dis-engagement. The cleats are not symetrical forward/backwards, pay attention. | | Weaknesses: | none so far. I had similar platform magnesium pedals from Weyless, I rank these as very comparable in weight and functionality, but the foot position when it is disengaged from the clips is necessarily way forward on the platform, where the cleat does not interfere with the clip jaws. That means reduced freedom of foot position on the platform, and slight unease going on technical terrain downhill. I take this as a weakness of the concept, not of that particular brand/design. | | Similar Products Used: | Wellgo clipless pedals form few years back. heavy, ugly, long learning curve not to say impossible to adjust correctly | | Bike Setup: | Santacruz superlight | | Bottom Line: | it all comes to finding a system that works for you. I need clipless for XC outings, I need platforms for technical singletracks, steep uphills and rugged downhills. there was only Time, Shimano and Crank Bros on teh mainstream marketplace. The first 2 brands are much heavier and I ruled them out. I am happy with what I got, it is optimum plus the egg beater clip is hard to beat.
4 chilis for the value becaue it is a bit pricey | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Stuart
a Downhiller
from Auckland NZ Date Reviewed: August 31, 2004 | | Favorite Trail: | Taniwha | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$130.00 | | Purchased At: | CYCO | | Strengths: | Lightweight for DH, simple design, ease of use, bigger platform that SPD Dh pedals. | | Weaknesses: | None found presently other than price. | | Similar Products Used: | SPD 525, 646, Time | | Bike Setup: | Demo 9 DH, 888, Saint, Mavic, Truvativ | | Bottom Line: | I've only really had one shuttle day on them but boy! these pedals rock. The ease of use, being into click into them 3 different ways - forwards, backwards and stomping makes life much easier when charging down rutted out tracks. The feel is similar to the Time pedals in that getting out of them is seamless. In fact they are as easy to release as just riding flats. The entry has a nice "click" and the float available means your feet can move around more without releasing from the pedal. I sold my 646's after one day on them. | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
Submitted by
Doug
a Weekend Warrior
from Germantown, MD Date Reviewed: August 23, 2004 | | Favorite Trail: | Gambrill State park | | Duration Product Used: | Less than 1 month | | Price Paid: |
$100.00 | | Purchased At: | Speedgoat.com | | Strengths: | Large platform good for riding uncliped when you need to dab. Eggbeater mechanism puts shimano pedals to shame (adjustable tension not really needed). Mud not a problem. Lighter than my old 545's. Easily Rebuilt!!!! | | Weaknesses: | trackion plates a little flimsy. good bash bends them easily. magnesium marrs too easily, trade off for the saved weight. Plastic cleat shims a little shady. | | Similar Products Used: | Shimano 545's, Ritchey SPD ripoffs | | Bike Setup: | Heckler w/ Fifth Element coilover, Psylo SL, XT drivetrain, Raceface cranks, big rubber knobbies, other odds and ends | | Bottom Line: | After much reasearching, I got these pedals to replace my old and battered 545s. Mud can be a serious issues around here since most of the terrain is relatively low lying. The mallets are great since the eggbeater mechanism doesn't have a whole lot too it. I personalliy think the best feature is the easy rebuild. My old 545s feel half attached to the spindle and have mabye two bearings in them. With the mallets, just 15 bucks or so and you're back in business. I don't foresee needing to do that anytime soon though.
Good for those needing some good platform stability, without the hassles of mud problems, and if you like the color orange :)
Wouldn't recommend for weight misers, or those who beat the hell out of their pedals on rocks and such(go for the Mallet Cs). | Value Rating: Overall Rating: |
| |
|
Photo Caption Contest
(sponsored by Maxxis)
|
Enter here
|
|
|