![]() |
riser bars for urban riding
I have a some cheap Nashbar risers on my fixed conversion, and they're just too wide--the proportions don't look right, and they stick out too much for riding in traffic and such. Anyone out there tell me what all the hipster riders are using as far as narrow risers, and where to get them? Are they kid-sized risers? Is there such a thing?
|
Hack-saw
|
I chopped 3.5 " off each side of my risers. Just enough to slide some Oury's on. And I'm not even a hipster!
|
alright, cool. I was just worried that the low part would look funky being disproportionately wider. Will get sawing, hipsters :D.
|
saw em
|
Don't saw 'em so much you don't have enough leverage to turn. That's just sad.
|
Thanks for the warning.
|
measure some other bars you are comfortable with.
pipe cutter is pretty easy too. |
Originally Posted by manboy
Don't saw 'em so much you don't have enough leverage to turn. That's just sad.
|
My risers are 16 inches.
See 2,785 in my signature. I guess I should add that I've since swapped out those risers for a set of 36cm B123s. I found risers too upright and passive. |
although I don't rock risers, my road drops are 37cm center to center at the ends...the size really works for me squeezing in between cars, but not too small that I don't have leverage (I'm 6'2"...long arms)
I don't know anything about hipsters tho |
Originally Posted by roscoenyc57
pipe cutter is pretty easy too.
you can get a cheap pipe cutter for about 5 bucks and it makes a WAY cleaner (and straighter) cut than most folks can get with a hacksaw. |
they took some getting used to, but i never had problems turning with these...
http://thirdrate.com/bikes/pinarello_cross3.jpg |
brunning did you have to shim those bars to fit the quill?
stylie set up... |
hehe those are just little guys
|
I guess you need it more for acceleration than for turning. That and trackstanding.
Actually, if you're doing sharp turns, the best way is putting pressure on the inner bar. Go physics! Those bitty bars are ridiculous. |
Originally Posted by Surferbruce
brunning did you have to shim those bars to fit the quill?
stylie set up... |
I've seen a few people riding around with chopped bars that barley allow the whole hand to fit on either side. It looks like an accident waiting to happen.
|
Originally Posted by roscoenyc57
measure some other bars you are comfortable with.
pipe cutter is pretty easy too. |
I'm not looking for anything ridiculously short. Related query: anyone know if cork grips like these
http://www.sheldonbrown.com/harris/h...ars.html#grips will bend to conform to the bars's curves if the bars are cut short, or would they crack? PS Thanks for the pipe cutter tip. |
I feel like cork would crack.
Better off with some generic mountain bike/bmx grips. Or Ourys. |
just a question, why is there no happy medium in the choice of bars around here. The popular styles are super drop stems with drop bars, or positive rise stems with riser mountain bars. Polar opposites.
I rarely see flat or +_5 degree stems with flatbars on fixed bikes. |
Originally Posted by manboy
I guess you need it more for acceleration than for turning. That and trackstanding.
Actually, if you're doing sharp turns, the best way is putting pressure on the inner bar. Go physics! Those bitty bars are ridiculous. |
Risers are weak. Get some $7 flat bars and cut them to 20" or less. Bonus points if you can find a bar with a defunct bike company logo on them - GT, Kooka, Nishiki, etc.
|
Originally Posted by AfterThisNap
just a question, why is there no happy medium in the choice of bars around here. The popular styles are super drop stems with drop bars, or positive rise stems with riser mountain bars. Polar opposites.
I rarely see flat or +_5 degree stems with flatbars on fixed bikes. |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:18 PM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.