So, the various current Wahoo cleats will work with the older Zero and Light Action pedals, but that's it. However, I have the X-series pedals and theres no support for those, unless perhaps one of the Chinese clone cleats might fit. As well as those, Speedplay made two sets of pedals whose cleats were compatible with the SPD hole pattern, the Frog and Syzr; I have multiple pairs of each, and again there's no support from Wahoo, so once the cleats I have are gone they're useless.calicyclist wrote: ↑Fri Feb 03, 2023 5:23 amIs there something preventing you using old pedals with newer cleats or the other way around? I have multiple bikes all with Speedplay including my wife's bikes and we've never had any compatibility issues over the years. Going all the way back from 2008-2022.satanas wrote: ↑Fri Feb 03, 2023 1:17 amSince Wahoo stabbed previous Speedplay users in the back I refuse to have anything to do with them. As well as refusing to make cleats for three Speedplay pedal systems (all of which I have), they've also stopped production of many of the bikefitting parts. I hate Wahoo.
There was zero communication from Wahoo for many months after the takeover about what might happen. This didn't help, and nor did their claim they would make another batch of Frog cleats - which never eventuated. The first "news" after the change of ownership was the cancellation of all existing wholesale orders without any prior warning, leaving the local importer, shops and customers in the lurch. None of us were impressed.
I hope that Wahoo suffer as much pain as possible, which they should, given karma...
As for Time, I had the original TBT cleats and shoes, and these were good (biomechanically) except for the sprung recentring. However, the bearings developed play fairly quickly, and cleat wear was also a problem. Their importer here in Australia were complete arseholes and effectively killed the product stone dead here as nobody was prepared to deal with them; they've never recovered here, even ~30 years later.