Bontrager's Right Side Load and Left Side Load bottle cages hold your bottles firmly and help make them accessible when space is tight.
Once fairly unusual, side-load bottle cages have become a bit of a Thing in the last few years as adventurous riders have partially filled their frames with luggage dangling from the top tube. Such frame bags don't leave much space for bottles, so if you've gone down that less-ridden path, you need side-load cages and these Bontrager units are definitely worth your attention.
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The name refers to the side you use when the cage is on the down tube, so bear that in mind if you're only buying one to fit, say, a seat tube on a very small frame. In that location you'll need a Right Side Load cage if your left hand is dominant, and vice versa.
I've become a convert to the cult of the frame bag since using one for a tour last year and finding it just a more convenient place for Stuff than pockets or a seatpack. The downside is that they get in the way of the usual exit and entry route for bottles.
Bontrager's Side Load Cages deftly solve the problem by having you point your bottle diagonally into the cage and push it home with a flick of the wrist. The cage then has a firm grip on the bottle so it doesn't bounce out on rubbish roads or trails. I can't vouch for its ability to hang on to a bottle on a super-rocky, steep mountain bike trail because Cambridgeshire has a tragic shortage of them, but it coped just fine with the knackered fenland 'roads' I mentioned in a previous bottle cage review.
> How to eat and drink right for long rides
Technically I suppose, this isn't quite a pure side-loader, since the bottle goes in diagonally whereas some side-loading cages really do accommodate shoving the bottle in from the side. But the practical upshot is the same: your bottle goes in without snagging on your small frame or frame bag. The holes for your frame's cage bolts are actually slots so you've got a bit of up and down adjustment too.
Some bottle cage makers pander to your vanity with a rainbow of colours so you can match your cage to your bar tape, saddle, sunglasses, tyres and pedals. Bontrager offers you gloss black, gloss charcoal grey, matt grey/black, gloss red and gloss white.
Fifteen quid is probably the upper limit of what's reasonable for a moulded plastic bottle cage. You could almost get two Zefal Pulse A2 cages for the Bontrager Side Load's price, but of course they wouldn't load from the side.
> Read more road.cc reviews of bottle cages here
Among true side-loaders we've tested in the last few years, the Arundel STR/DTR carbon fibre cages are £65 each, which makes the Bontrager cages look like an absolute bargain. The Topeak Dualside cage is £14.99 which is much more like it, and the same as the Bontrager cages.
A reasonable price, then, combined with ease of use, a solid hold on your bottles and the convenience of side entry makes the Bontrager Side Load bottle cages an excellent choice, assuming you need to squeeze bottles into a restricted space.
Verdict
Well-designed cages for bikes without much space for bottles
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Make and model: Bontrager Side Load Water Bottle Cage
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?
This is a bottle cage for anyone who has a really small frame such that the top tube gets in the way of pulling a bottle out of a standard cage, or whose frame is partially filled with, say, a frame bag.
Trek makes two versions, left-hand and right-hand. If you get one of each you can put one on the down tube, the other on the seat tube and access them both with your dominant hand.
Trek/Bontrager says:
'Side loading for tight spaces
'This side-loading cage lets you easily access bottles from small spaces while you ride. It's suitable for road and mountain use and is the ideal choice for smaller frames, full-suspension bikes and when using a frame bag.'
Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?
Product details from Trek/Bontrager:
Lightweight and durable composite construction
The side-loading design allows for easy bottle access on compact frames
Suitable for road and mountain use
Use with the [matching] Side Load Cage for seat tube and down tube access on the same side of frame
Rate the product for quality of construction:
8/10
Nicely moulded from nylon.
Rate the product for performance:
9/10
Really easy to get a bottle in and out, but holds them well when riding potholed dirt roads.
Rate the product for durability:
9/10
I wouldn't want to bet they'd survive a fluke crash, but in regular use should last ages.
Rate the product for weight (if applicable)
6/10
Not a priority for me, but there are significantly lighter cages for around the same or even less money, though of course they don't have the handy side-entry facility.
Rate the product for value:
5/10
Thirty quid a pair to be able to access water even with a frame bag. Bargain! Okay, they're actually about the same price as other plastic side-load cages and I think that's a fair price.
Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose
Really well.
Tell us what you particularly liked about the product
Being able to use two bottles with a frame bag.
Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product
Nothing.
How does the price compare to that of similar products in the market, including ones recently tested on road.cc?
Fifteen quid is probably the upper limit of what's reasonable for a moulded plastic bottle cage. You could almost get two Zefal Pulse A2 cages for the Bontrager Side Load's price, but of course they wouldn't load from the side.
Among true side-loaders we've tested in the last few years, the Arundel STR/DTR carbon fibre cages (https://road.cc/content/review/269133-arundel-strdtr-side-entry-bottle-c...) are £65 each, which makes the Bontrager cages look like an absolute bargain. The Topeak Dualside cage (https://road.cc/content/review/195641-topeak-dualside-cage) is £14.99, which is much more like it.
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 Bontrager Side Load cages work so well I'm tempted to give them 4.5/5, but in fairness they're very good, but they're not quite exceptional. Definitely highly recommended though.
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, mtb,
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3 comments
I would have thought that a right-left movement across the bike could be more destabilising than an up-down pull and push....
It probably is, but if you have a frame bag in the way it's not always practical, or even sometimes possible, to use a traditional cage.
In reality a lot of the side-pull cages work with a sort of 45° twist and slide, which is quite easy to do.
Look decent but think you're right that the price is probably at the top of what's palatable - RRP is the same as what you could get three of the quite well regarded Zefal Wiiz side(ish)-loaders.