I have put a lot of Mirrycle bar end mirrors on bikes that I have owned and ridden as well as bikes that Ive fixed up and sold. Recently I acquired a fairly high-end recumbent bicycle which came with bar end shifters. I could have changed out the shifters to triggers or grips but I like them well enough so needed another way to mount mirrors. There are a couple of third-party mount options for Mirrycle mirrors but none I wanted to use for this bike so decided to give these TAGVO mirrors a try. At the price for the pair and with Prime protection it wasnt a big gamble. While I prefer handle bar toys which require a tool to install or remove (to make theft a little bit harder), the rubber straps of these mirrors make installation very easy and hold the mirror firmly in place. I didnt even have to put a shim around the handlebar first. I dont plan to remove and reinstall these mirrors, now that theyre set the way I want theyll never come off unless they break or something; but for those who have several bikes and want to swap these mirrors among them or want to remove them every time they lock up, the strap makes that easy to do. The mirror bends and swivels to any position you might want and once set in place dont move even when riding over pretty solid bumps and rough road surface. I havent owned them long enough to tell yet but I do hope that the rotation axis remain tight as unlike with a Mirrycle mirrors mount there is no way to tighten them if they do become loose. If you rely on a mirror theres nothing worse than glancing at it when you need to check behind you only to find the mirror is not in the right position to do the job, and having to constantly reposition a mirror is an annoyance I dont want to deal with. Ill edit this section if that becomes a problem later, just one day out of the box it seems fine. Be aware that the mirror mount cant position the mirror at any distance from your handlebars. Thats perfect for me but if you need to have the mirror non-adjacent to your bars, this wont work for you. There are other mirrors with telescoping extensions or long flexible stems you should consider if you need the mirror surface to be at some distance from your bars. The mirror itself is very low quality. Images in the mirror arent sharp, partly because the mirror is quite convex and partly because it just isnt shaped very well (spherical aberration). There are smudges which cant be removed because they arent smudges, they are glops of glue or shmutz between the mirrors inner surface and the black plastic mount. There is also dried glue around the perimeter of the mirror in some spots. None of this makes the mirror unusable, but if youre used to the clear, crisp images you get with a Mirrycle mirror you cant help but be disappointed. This low quality in both construction and image quality is why I felt I had to deduct one star. Id be happier if the mirror surface were closer to flat (i.e. less convex) as thats a larger issue for me than the overall low quality of the mirror materials and the construction errors. I wish there were some way to put the business end of a Mirrycle mirror into this TAGVO mirrors mount. That would let me get a high-quality image positioned just where I need it on my new recumbent bike and could see using such a mirror/mount combo in place of a bar end mounted Mirrycle in many cases in the future. I will buy more of these if I get a hold of other bikes which cant take a Mirrycle in a bar end mount, but Im going to keep looking for someone making a mount like the one on this TAGVO which will work with a Mirrycle mirror. edit: So I've removed and reinstalled these mirrors on my bike many times now over the last month and I definitely see how the little plastic tab that the rubber strap hooks onto could become damaged over time. I ALMOST bent the tab on one of the mirrors so now I know I need to be gentle with them. I still miss the quality of the Mirrycle mirror's images every time I ride this bike but these TAVGO mirrors are working well enough and were certainly a bargain price for the pair.