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Yo dawg, I heard you liked bar-ends, so we put bar-ends on your bar-ends.
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i wonder what's stopping him from going to a 3rd tier of bar ends.
it seems to me that attempting to steer such a contraption would be awkward, but perhaps it's not. |
I go for somewhere around 2-10° above the horizontal I reckon.
http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6043/6...4c533b44_b.jpg http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6045/5...af53be1e_b.jpg http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5226/5...c8e59992_o.jpg http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5270/5...9167de5c_b.jpg Controls on the barends by Lester Of Puppets, on Flickr |
I just shake my head when I see bar ends pointing up; it's popular in the ghetto here, so it's just 'pimped'. (The big pullback bars on old-style cruisers get pointed straight up, too....)
The MTB 'style' is to forgo bar ends with MTB riser bars; I say, STFU and ride your own bike. My bar ends angle up about 5-10 degrees, whatever the angle is that's natural to the hands when standing and pedaling. I won't hate on those of you who pimp your bar ends, but I will shake my head after you've passed. I know that just kills you.... |
Look at these I came across today. I need to fine tune the adjustment on them. I can't find anymore like these that are this adjustable.http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/...2_172349-1.jpg
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i see plenty of people commuting on road bikes with their dropped 'tour de france style' bars (sorry don' t know the real name) turned upwards to look like mtb bar ends in order to give them a more upright position. looks pretty funny until you see it on ten different bikes a day and then you get used to it.
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A friend of mine has something like five sets of bar ends going at once, and on a pair of north roads to boot. Three of them have been kludged together to create something that resembles a drop north road, and the other two are positioned as aero-bars. It all works out a lot better than it sounds, but it does look pretty messy.
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Originally Posted by modernjess
(Post 7636764)
The abuse of bar ends seems to be one of cycling's great plagues. What was invented to aid and make up for the limitations of flat bars for mountain biking about 20 years ago now seems to be mainly used by heel pedalers to make up for criminally poor bike fit. It's sad really.
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....or by older/out of shape people that need a more upright position. Let's all make fun of the old fat people, it's so easy......at least they are still out there riding. Let's leave the bike snobbery to the other forums, this is one of the few cool ones left.
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Originally Posted by fastbartender
(Post 13601270)
....or by older/out of shape people that need a more upright position. Let's all make fun of the old fat people, it's so easy......at least they are still out there riding. Let's leave the bike snobbery to the other forums, this is one of the few cool ones left.
my father has a late 80s nishiki hybrid that had a relatively forward riding position. it worked fine for him in his 40s. he's now in his 60s and when i saw one day that he had flipped his bar ends vertical and was riding on them for a more upright posture, i had to scold him a bit. i went out and got him a 6" riser bar and switched it in for the flat bar and he's now much happier on the bike. |
Originally Posted by Drummerboy1975
(Post 13600976)
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Originally Posted by fastbartender
(Post 13601270)
....or by older/out of shape people that need a more upright position.
There are many ways to obtain a more upright position. Proper bike fit has more to do with practicality than elitism, and impractical solutions to a simple root cause (bad bike fit) can be funny looking. In the case of vertical bar ends my first guess is that the bars are too low. Better options exist (riser stem, shorter stem, riser bar, more bar sweep, etc etc etc). To me it is akin to someone cutting a hole in the roof of the car and installing a bubble skylight in order to have enough headroom. My sense of practicality tells me that perhaps the person has chosen the wrong vehicle, or at least a poor solution. Hey, just sayin' ;) |
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
(Post 13601298)
i went out and got him a 6" riser bar and switched it out for the flat bar and he's now much happier on the bike.
I'm sure he's stoked to have easy access to brakes and shifters once again! |
I think for a lot of these people it is uncomfortable to ride in any one position, even the correctly fit one, for too long. I know that's what my mother says. Slapping some near vertical bar ends on is just about the easiest and cheapest fix you could make. Sounds pretty practical to me. If you're stacking bar ends on bar ends on bar ends that maybe a different story.
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<---doesn't have bar ends and isn't old or fat, I just don't like to see anything but love in the commuting forum...
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Originally Posted by fastbartender
(Post 13603310)
I think for a lot of these people it is uncomfortable to ride in any one position, even the correctly fit one, for too long...Slapping some ergonomically positioned bar ends on is just about the easiest and cheapest fix you could make. Sounds pretty practical to me.
On the notion that vertical bar-ends are more practical, I'm open to see exactly how this is possible, but any application I've seen has been a compromise at best (less control, non-optimal hand positioning, etc). |
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