2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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Now, I am a big one for getting the bike right. 69cms for me, centre of bb to saddle. 72cms from rear of saddle to centre of bars. Perfect....so let's set up every bike exactly like that...and that makes all my bikes EXACTLY RIGHT....doesn't it? That way I am going to avoid back injury and knee and hip joint pain...
But maybe trying to get exactly the same cockpit dimensions in every bike is a bad idea. What if those measurements - even after a professional bike fit - are wrong for me, or change as I develop better muscularture as the season progresses? I think of friends who have serious repetitive injuries from tennis, running, and cycling. Yes, it's clear that if you are running with far too low a saddle (don't we just see that on the road all the time?) or way too high (rock those hips) or too much reach (ouch my lower back) and so on, then you need to get that sorted - to get into the ZONE OF BEST FIT. But I actually think that one reason that I am not wingeing as much as some others I know when I ride is that I have a number of bikes and they are all slightly different in fit and geometry; they do not place exactly the same highly specific stresses and strains on my joints and body.
What varies? Q for a start. I run different pedals - Hope, Burgrec, DMR. These all place two feet slightly different distances apart - Burgtec notable in having very inboard design. And some of my bikes are boost, some 68, some 73. I always aimed for very low Q but that's gone out of the window with modern frame geometry. Reach - the actual reach varies a lot from bike to bike - and definitely is very different on my older and very new bikes. There's no way that I can tune all my bikes to get exactly the same actual seat tube angle, the right saddle-bar distance and then exactly the same reach figure.
So even if they are all built up approximately around the same reach and saddle height and Q, it does necessarily vary from bike to bike, which I am beginning is actually a good thing. My COTIC commuter bike is very different to my hack Ragley MTB, which is different again to my Transition, which is VERY different to the '94 nickel P7 Orange.
And one area which suggests that 'getting it exactly the same all the time' might induce repetitive strain injury is my wrists. All my bars have the same backsweep - 9 deg - which is an industry standard, pretty much, and I have bloody awful carpel tunnel syndrome - which I can relieve by adjusting position on my bike which has bar ends but not on my 760 wide modern bikes, where bar ends would be a serious danger.
So....unlike some others, I have stopped really fretting about each bike converging on a set of measurements which get my body into exactly the same position and am focussing on getting the set up into a zone of right fit and then just fiddling to get it to feel right. Oh...and focusing on riding. not my bike.....
But maybe trying to get exactly the same cockpit dimensions in every bike is a bad idea. What if those measurements - even after a professional bike fit - are wrong for me, or change as I develop better muscularture as the season progresses? I think of friends who have serious repetitive injuries from tennis, running, and cycling. Yes, it's clear that if you are running with far too low a saddle (don't we just see that on the road all the time?) or way too high (rock those hips) or too much reach (ouch my lower back) and so on, then you need to get that sorted - to get into the ZONE OF BEST FIT. But I actually think that one reason that I am not wingeing as much as some others I know when I ride is that I have a number of bikes and they are all slightly different in fit and geometry; they do not place exactly the same highly specific stresses and strains on my joints and body.
What varies? Q for a start. I run different pedals - Hope, Burgrec, DMR. These all place two feet slightly different distances apart - Burgtec notable in having very inboard design. And some of my bikes are boost, some 68, some 73. I always aimed for very low Q but that's gone out of the window with modern frame geometry. Reach - the actual reach varies a lot from bike to bike - and definitely is very different on my older and very new bikes. There's no way that I can tune all my bikes to get exactly the same actual seat tube angle, the right saddle-bar distance and then exactly the same reach figure.
So even if they are all built up approximately around the same reach and saddle height and Q, it does necessarily vary from bike to bike, which I am beginning is actually a good thing. My COTIC commuter bike is very different to my hack Ragley MTB, which is different again to my Transition, which is VERY different to the '94 nickel P7 Orange.
And one area which suggests that 'getting it exactly the same all the time' might induce repetitive strain injury is my wrists. All my bars have the same backsweep - 9 deg - which is an industry standard, pretty much, and I have bloody awful carpel tunnel syndrome - which I can relieve by adjusting position on my bike which has bar ends but not on my 760 wide modern bikes, where bar ends would be a serious danger.
So....unlike some others, I have stopped really fretting about each bike converging on a set of measurements which get my body into exactly the same position and am focussing on getting the set up into a zone of right fit and then just fiddling to get it to feel right. Oh...and focusing on riding. not my bike.....