Re: the riser bar conundrum? the riser bar nasty!
You are not alone at all. I too come from a time when the first thing we did was pull the factory stem and riser bars and install some insanely long, flat stem and a flat bar. Usually very narrow. My first real mountain bike was a Klein Pinnacle and it had a nice short, upward rise ally stem and riser bars. Very comfortable and of course I took them right off! But if you look back at a lot of the early mtbs many of them had a similar set up and probably rode great. Anyway just in the last couple of years have I come to realize that I now need that sort of a set up as I near 60 years old. I can ride longer and harder with much less pain in my back and neck with high stem, riser bar. And oddly enough my 2013 Trek Super Fly Al has a high front end that feels very similar to my old Merlin with a short, high stem and 1" riser bars. Go figure.
You are not alone at all. I too come from a time when the first thing we did was pull the factory stem and riser bars and install some insanely long, flat stem and a flat bar. Usually very narrow. My first real mountain bike was a Klein Pinnacle and it had a nice short, upward rise ally stem and riser bars. Very comfortable and of course I took them right off! But if you look back at a lot of the early mtbs many of them had a similar set up and probably rode great. Anyway just in the last couple of years have I come to realize that I now need that sort of a set up as I near 60 years old. I can ride longer and harder with much less pain in my back and neck with high stem, riser bar. And oddly enough my 2013 Trek Super Fly Al has a high front end that feels very similar to my old Merlin with a short, high stem and 1" riser bars. Go figure.