Arrived quickly. Good price. So
"Arrived quickly. Good price. So far the pedals are working well but I haven't beat the crap out of them yet so time will tell."

Overall rating: 4.5 / 5 from 6 reviews.
Review topics: ["size","grip","pedals","factor"].
"Arrived quickly. Good price. So far the pedals are working well but I haven't beat the crap out of them yet so time will tell."
"Great looking, well constructed, thin composite pedal, decent grip, and platform size appropriate for smaller foot (I wear size 7), slime green color on point. Unfortunately for me, I felt that the Q factor (paired with OEM cranks on my Marin San Quentin 2) was a bit too narrow for my natural riding stance. As a matter of fact, pedal wouldn’t spin with a crank boot because the pedal is flush with the crank — not a big deal but stating this to give an idea of the how this affects Q factor. My feet wanted to be on the outside/lateral part of the pedals. Previous pedal was the DMR V-6 and that set up a better Q Factor for me. Still a great pedal, but YMMV. Will transition these to my son where kid’s Q factors are naturally narrower."
"They are nice pedals but the orange is quite a bit darker than pictured."
"Nice, well built, and light pedals! I didn't realize there were two sizes, and ended up trading for the regular size (these are the small). The small size is noticeably smaller than the regular, but still plenty of pedal. It is slightly bigger than the RaceFace Chester, for comparison. Very happy with the pedals so far. Also, CambriaBike customer service rules!"
"Nice pedals. The thin profile, color selection, small size option, and good price and these an easy choice."
"Picked up in size small these based on recommendation as good for a youth bike. My 10 year old daughter has a pair on her 26” Trailcraft Timber MTB and loves the grip and size, so I got another pair to put on her 24” Spawn Cycles Katori dirt jumper. Be aware that the pins are like 12mm and stick up really high. Gives great grip but also double as a calf-shredder. Also, the pedal body contacts the crank arm (no spindle gap). On the Timber this isn’t an issue, but on the Spawn the pedal body actually rubs on the crank arm on the left pedal. This will probably wear in over time, but right now it causes a significant drag on the pedal rotation."