Pressure on hands
#1
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Joined: Feb 2015
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Pressure on hands
Hi all, I ride a 2013 Trek Madone size 56. I got a professional bike fit. Everything looks good on video, she set me up KOP and it all looks perfect. However, I am getting quite a bit of pressure on my hands and upper body. My fitter insists the bike fits perfectly but I am not comfortable. I feel the bike may be too big for me, I am 5'9 and a half inch tall with a 32 and a half inch inseam. Any suggestions on correcting this? Does it seem I am on the right sized bike?
#2
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Joined: Apr 2005
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From: Northern California
Two people with the same body dimensions may need a different setup because of differences in riding technique or physical ability. Upper body/arm/hand pain is often a symptom of poor core strength. Were you honest with your fitter about your physical fitness?
#3
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From: Bastrop Texas
Bikes: Univega, Peu P6, Peu PR-10, Ted Williams, Peu UO-8, Peu UO-18 Mixte, Peu Dolomites
I would suspect conditioning. Often you have to break your body into a new bike. First try lowering your seat about 1/2" and raising your bars about 3/4" of an inch. Latter on you can go back to your original setup...
#5
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From: Minnesota
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Hi all, I ride a 2013 Trek Madone size 56. I got a professional bike fit. Everything looks good on video, she set me up KOP and it all looks perfect. However, I am getting quite a bit of pressure on my hands and upper body. My fitter insists the bike fits perfectly but I am not comfortable. I feel the bike may be too big for me, I am 5'9 and a half inch tall with a 32 and a half inch inseam. Any suggestions on correcting this? Does it seem I am on the right sized bike?
I'd look at the paid bike fit as the set point and there is going to be experimental changes that happen around that set point. I also had a professional fit and I eventually raised the stem a bit and did a lot with Q factor and pedal cleat positioning to resolve some other problems. There is no one fit for everyone.
J.
#6
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From: Wisconsin
Bikes: 2012 Salsa Casseroll, 2009 Kona Blast
#7
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Bikes: 1991 Bianchi Eros, 1964 Armstrong, 1988 Diamondback Ascent, 1988 Bianchi Premio, 1987 Bianchi Sport SX, 1980s Raleigh mixte (hers), All-City Space Horse (hers)
Make sure you are keeping your elbows loose. Locked arms will allow your wrists and shoulders to get beat up over the course of your rides.
#8
Randomhead
Joined: Aug 2008
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From: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
fore-aft saddle position and stem length can change the weight balance between your butt and your hands. I went to a shorter stem and had a lot of hand problems. Moved my seat forward a little and went back to the longer stem, and everything got better.
#9
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I don't think its posture or locking elbows or anything like that on the bike, it's gravity. If I sit on the bike in a riding position without my hands on the bars I get pulled down. I thought about tilting the seat a tad or sliding it back an inch to see if its better, I might even try some aerobars.
#10
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From: Irvine
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac SL3, Nishiki Pro Hybrid SL
Hi all, I ride a 2013 Trek Madone size 56. I got a professional bike fit. Everything looks good on video, she set me up KOP and it all looks perfect. However, I am getting quite a bit of pressure on my hands and upper body. My fitter insists the bike fits perfectly but I am not comfortable. I feel the bike may be too big for me, I am 5'9 and a half inch tall with a 32 and a half inch inseam. Any suggestions on correcting this? Does it seem I am on the right sized bike?
I'm a new rider and fairly out of shape. I had the same problem, but like you the fitter said it was fit perfectly and my core was weak. He had me do the same test where I get in ride position and try and take my hands off the bars. I couldn't for more than a second, but he could hold the position as needed. Bottom line is my core was too weak so I'm essentially using my hands to keep me up and it's like doing 1 long push up. I've been doing some yoga and up downs and after riding the new fit for almost a month my hands aren't as sore as that used to be.
I would say the fitter is right and you should leave it as is.
#11
Well road bikes are designed for performance first, and comfort a distant second so truly being comfortable on a road bike is a tall order. Being a little out of shape doesn't help. Moving the saddle backwards on the rails will help take the weight off your hands quite a bit although this may not help performance. Also try raising the bars a little until you are fitter.
Anthony
Anthony





