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Clipless shoes are the ones with cleats and clips on the pedal that the cleat clips into. So why in the world are the called clipless?

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2 Answers 2

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It has to do with the difference between pedals with toe clips and clipless pedals.

Pedals with Toe Clips

alt text

Clipless Pedals (and shoes)

alt text

The clipless shoes are for the clipless pedals.

The wikipedia page says the following:

Clipless refers to the lack of an external toe clip, but not to be confused with platform pedals without toe clips.

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    Just to clarify, there is a bit of difference in terminology here. The 'toe clip' or 'clips' (black plastic in the first image above) should not be called a 'cage' or 'cages'. A 'cage' on a pedal is the metal surrounding the pedal body; in the above image, it is the silver part. In that sense, 'clipless' pedals are 'cageless' as well. Commented Aug 26, 2010 at 17:56
  • @Dustin, thanks, you're right - I'm removing the word 'cage' from the post.
    – b.roth
    Commented Aug 27, 2010 at 8:55
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The confusion comes from the word "clip" being both a noun and a verb.

Clip as a noun:

  1. to hold in a tight grip : clutch
  2. to clasp, fasten, or secure with a clip

This describes the old-school pedals with the leather (or vinyl) straps that strap the foot down to the pedal.

"Clip-less" pedals do not have the aforementioned securing strap. They (obviously) use a different system.

Using "Clip" as a verb to refer to securing something (and not cutting something) is called "conversion" (linguistic term) or "verbing" (non offial term).

So, saying "Clip into your pedals." is similar to saying "I'm tabling this discussion." It's taking a noun and converting it into a verb.

So, we cyclists confused ourselves :D

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