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Originally Posted by yummygooey
(Post 12395142)
http://www.somafab.com/bar_lateriser8.jpg
+ http://www.origin-8.com/images/new_400/33617.jpg + http://www.westernbikeworks.com/prod...50/cgscr-1.jpg http://road.bike198.com/wp-content/u...fsa-k-wing.jpg Which is probably the way to go. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 12396684)
Where your hands are does matter.
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Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 12396815)
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Nitto Noodle has the sweepback
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Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 12396850)
Which is precisely why the type of handlebar matters - because different handlebars provide different places to put your hands.
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Originally Posted by hairnet
(Post 12396890)
Nitto Noodle has the sweepback
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2 Attachment(s)
I mean, bullhorns should work, right?
...but not if you install them like this: http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment...7&d=1300839104 http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment...8&d=1300839107 http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=194647http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=194648 |
carleton - I'm stepping in what you're laying down but with so many different types of handlebars available, ruling out a certain kind out as "standard" is ridiculous.
OP - that's you're problem right there. Your bars aren't "standard" enough. |
Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 12396953)
carleton - I'm stepping in what you're laying down but with so many different types of handlebars available, ruling a certain kind out as "standard" is ridiculous.
OP - that's you're problem right there. Your bars aren't "standard". The handlebars aren't he problem...or the solution. It's where they are installed that is the problem and the solution. |
Originally Posted by hairnet
(Post 12396890)
Nitto Noodle has the sweepback
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Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 12396977)
And provide a hand position not found on other drop bars with no sweep.
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Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 12396703)
real track geometry (AKA a sprint geometry)
...and pretty much this:
Originally Posted by Ken Cox
(Post 12387219)
The type of handlebars doesn't matter.
Where your hands fit in space, in relation to your saddle and bottom bracket, matters. |
What kind of shoes don't matter then either. We should all be equally as comfortable walking in the same shoe, regardless of the fact that all of our feet and bodies are different.
*edited |
Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 12397462)
What kind of shoes don't matter then either. We should all be equally as comfortable wearing the same shoe.
People wear sneakers, loafers, sandles, road cycling shoes, MTB shoes, etc... all comfortably if the saddle is the proper height. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 12397535)
all comfortably if the saddle is the proper height.
May I ask what you and Scrod's inseams and saddle height (saddle to bb) are? |
Originally Posted by Squirrelli
(Post 12397563)
I've been messing with my saddle height for awhile, I think I've been riding it too high.
May I ask what you and Scrod's inseams and saddle height (saddle to bb) are? ...because our numbers don't matter to you. 1cm in either direction can make a noticeable difference. Also, clothing, shoes, insoles, cleat type, pedals, saddle height (from rails to top of the padding) all play a factor. I've mentioned previously that I've had two different pairs of cycling shoes that required a 1cm saddle height adjustment if I used one or the other pair. Also, some people are heel-droppers and some are toe-dippers and others are neutral in their pedal stroke. That, too, plays a big factor. |
Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 12397462)
What kind of shoes don't matter then either. We should all be equally as comfortable walking in the same shoe, regardless of the fact that all of our feet and bodies are different.
*edited |
I used to have the same problem. What helped me was to lower the seatpost a cm or so, raise my (quill)stem a cm or so, and bring my saddle forward little bit(2.5mm maybe). It made a pretty big difference.
I don't think track or trackish bikes were really meant to be comfortable over long distances, but they're fun as hell to ride. If your hands are lower than your butt, you're going to experience discomfort eventually. Even just to look up to see traffic. Risers can bring your hands up, but leave you with only one position. Everything's a tradeoff, ya know? I can say that my angus has felt very comfortable since I got it to the point where my saddle is close to the same height as my hands. What is it Mike Watt said? Something like that. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 12398183)
Also, some people are heel-droppers and some are toe-dippers and others are neutral in their pedal stroke. That, too, plays a big factor.
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Sorry. For reference. Mike Watt said:
One thing punk taught us, too, was that if you look down at people, or look up at 'em too much you get a kink in your neck. Don't be looking up or looking down. I'm just like you, in a certain way, but in an intrinsic way I'm different than you and you're different than everyone else. You know? |
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