Hey Jordan,

The Atlantis is designed with generous clearances, and I've never had
a problem achieving great fenders lines with my tires ranging from
1.5" to 2".  I have the 26" wheel version, but this'll apply to your
700c.  With a little patience and ingenuity you should get a great
fender line with most any tire you'd ride on the Atlantis.

I really like using old corks for rear fender spacing at the brake
bridge and chainstay bridge (preferably the wider ones from Belgium
Ales, but normal wine corks work just fine) .  They're cheap and
plentiful, so if you miss-drill one or cut one too short just grab
another.  Get some longer bolts at your LBS or local hardware store
(zip ties work just fine in a pinch, though).  Drill a hole lengthwise
through the cork and cut to desired length with a handsaw.  The SKS
fenders already have a hole for the bolt at the chainstay bridge, but
you'll need to make one at the brake bridge.  While holding the fender
in place mark the hole spot.  You can then drill this hole, but I've
found the reamer on a Swiss Army knife does the trick, too.  You can
use the supplied SKS sliding bridge mount here, but drilling and
spacing the fender is really easy, makes for a more secure connection,
and looks loads better.

For the front fender, you might be able to use a piece of the hardware
that came with the fender set to fashion an extension to the mounting
tang (the piece that's about 1.5" long and has 3 holes in it.  just
cut-off or bend-out-of-the-way any excess length).  Not glamorous or
picturesque, but it'll do.  Since the SKS fenders tend to be a bit on
the short side, I like to mount them on the front of the fork crown
and then install a mudflap to catch the bottom spray.

If this isn't making any sense, I'd be glad to post some pics.

-Jay
Asheville, NC

On Mar 9, 6:33 pm, Jordan <prospir...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi folks. I've recently had some SKS fenders mounted on my Atlantis.
> Unfortunately, I'm not really happy with the results. Both the front
> and rear fenders extend pretty far from the tire. This is especially
> annoying with the front tire, as I already didn't have a lot of toe
> clearance (I'm on a 63 Atlantis 2 with 700's).
>
> It looks like both front and rear fenders are limited by a hard
> mounting. In the case of the front fender, it's the mounting behind
> the fork. I don't see how it could go any lower. For the rear fender,
> the issue is the fastening to the bottom bracket. Both of these seem
> addressable with the right hardware, but I'm not sure what that would
> be. The parts that came with the fenders don't seem to do the job.
>
> How can I get a nice close-to-the-tire mounting like I've seen in many
> photos?
>
> Thanks,
> Jordan
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