It's hard to imagine a much simpler way of fixing your phone to your handlebar than the BTR Silicone Handlebar Mobile Phone Mount, and sometimes simplicity really is best, or at least very good. The BTR Phone Mount Just Works, grabbing handlebar and phone securely and keeping them together until you want to separate them.
- Pros: Very simple, holds phone securely
- Cons: No bells or whistles, straps slightly impede using home button
It feels almost like I'm insulting you to explain how the BTR Phone Mount works, but just in case it's not obvious: this is a single moulded piece of silicone rubber that incorporates a ladder strap and hook to grab your handlebar and thin, very stretchy loops for your phone. Pop phone in loops, wrap strap snugly round your handlebar and you're away.
I used it with an iPhone 7. Larger phones should fit fine, but if you have a smaller phone, you'll want to measure carefully before buying. The BTR Phone Mount might not hold on well to anything significantly smaller than an iPhone 7's 138mm x 67mm.
> Buy this online here
But if your phone does fit, the BTR Phone Mount's grip is tenacious. My partner Caroline is a big fan of having her phone on her handlebar and even managed to crash-test the BTR Phone Mount. It hung on to her phone. (And she was amazingly unharmed despite going over the bar in a spill that could have been very nasty indeed.)
Anything this simple is going to have downsides, of course. For a start there's no weather protection for your phone here, so you'll want to put it in a case of some sort if you're riding in anything but dry, settled weather.
BTR claims the Phone Mount 'lets you see the whole phone screen and home button' and that's not strictly wrong. You can still see the home button, but to press it you might have to push the loop out of the way, a minor annoyance.
It works best with your phone on the handlebar and in portrait orientation. If you want to look at, say, a map in landscape mode them you're going to have to mount it on your stem and put up with whatever angle it ends up at, which might not be ideal for viewing the screen.
The BTR Phone Mount's price of just 12 quid isn't much to securely attach your phone to your handlebar, but there are an awful lot of inexpensive phone mounts out there. This one by TeamObsidian, for example, is incredibly similar to the BTR mount and costs nine quid for the medium-size version and 11 for the large. This £10 Cocoda mount includes a mechanical handlebar clamp and lets you rotate your phone through 180 degrees so you can set it to landscape without taking it off the bar. For £18, this mount by Bovon has a ball-and-socket arrangement so you can change the angle it sits at, and a quick-release so you can easily lift your phone off the bar to take a call.
> Buyer's Guide: 26 of the best smartphone cycling apps
More features means more mechanical complexity and therefore more to go wrong. The great appeal of the BTR Phone Mount is there's really almost nothing to go wrong. As I said up top, it Just Works, and that's a compelling reason to like it.
Verdict
Tidy and simple phone holder that does exactly what it says on the tin and no more
Make and model: BTR Silicone Handlebar Mobile Phone Mount
Size tested: Fits all Smartphones
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?
It's a silicone rubber widget that mounts your phone on your handlebar or pretty much anything else cylindrical.
BTR says:
"One piece of durable silicone the BTR Phone-Fix Mount is an easy way to attach your phone / GPS device to your handlebar.
Use it portrait or landscape to get your best viewing angle. Turn it sideways & it can be used on your car dashboard so you can use your phone as a safe sat nav or use in the home as a handy prop up for your phone so it is easily visible!
The Durable Silicone stretches & keeps your phone secure PLUS it won't cover up your screen: each of the corners have a specially designed fitting to hold your phone securely but not cover your view!"
Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?
It's a stretchy rubber widget. There really isn't much in the way of technical details to tell.
Rate the product for quality of construction:
8/10
Rate the product for performance:
9/10
It does the job, but don't expect anything in the way of bells and whistles.
Rate the product for value:
6/10
Twelve quid is a reasonable amount of money for the functionality here, but you can get similar mounts for less, or ones with more bells and whistles for not much more money.
Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose
Very well.
Tell us what you particularly liked about the product
Its simplicity.
Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product
The loops can get in the way of the phone's home button, but it's a small niggle.
How does the price compare to that of similar products in the market, including ones recently tested on road.cc?
Similar widgets on, say, Amazon are a bit cheaper.
Did you enjoy using the product? Yes
Would you consider buying the product? Yes
Would you recommend the product to a friend? Yes
Use this box to explain your overall score
The BTR Phone Mount does its one simple thing very well. It loses points only for being a shade more expensive than very similar widgets from the likes of Amazon.
Age: 53 Height: 5ft 11in Weight: 100kg
I usually ride: Scapin Style My best bike is:
I've been riding for: Over 20 years I ride: Most days I would class myself as: Expert
I regularly do the following types of riding: commuting, touring, club rides, general fitness riding, mountain biking
Your analogy is completely unrealistic, though. You left one of the packets of Jaffa Cakes uneaten.
That will be along in a week or so in the annual reboot of the "All I want for Christmas is... not this" article along with the Park Tool pizza...
For that money, I'd go to Matthew Sowter - https://www.saffronframeworks.com/
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