Why did bar ends disappear?

Johnsqual

Senior Retro Guru
Hey,

Looking at older racing photos, you see people of the generation of Rik Van Looy up to Tom Simpson riding bikes with bar end shifters, but by the 1970s they seem to have died out (except for cyclcocross).

Why is this? Were bar ends somehow inferior to downtube shifters, or was it just a fashion thing?

Johnny
 
Downtube shifters are lighter and provide a quicker crisper shift due to the shorter cable length but obviously that could be debated.
 
Fashion.

Bar end levers were used by many 'roadman sprinters' because they could change up a gear (or two) in the gallop without having to take a hand from the bars. (eg Van Looy, Reybroeck, Michael Wright).

I used them for a few years - see my avatar.

Not that I class myself in anywhere near the same league as those mentioned above.

Although Ian Cammish did describe me as a 'legend' once.

Or was it a 'leg end' :?
 
Johnsqual":3489zvhf said:
Hey,

Looking at older racing photos, you see people of the generation of Rik Van Looy up to Tom Simpson riding bikes with bar end shifters, but by the 1970s they seem to have died out (except for cyclcocross).
Why is this? Were bar ends somehow inferior to downtube shifters, or was it just a fashion thing?

Johnny

Bar-ends kept going for much longer than that on touring bikes (as I well remember from the Dawes brochures of my teens!) - they still pop up now & again but have lost a lot of ground to STI and Ergopower levers.

David
 
David B":31uftaoa said:
Johnsqual":31uftaoa said:
Hey,

Looking at older racing photos, you see people of the generation of Rik Van Looy up to Tom Simpson riding bikes with bar end shifters, but by the 1970s they seem to have died out (except for cyclcocross).
Why is this? Were bar ends somehow inferior to downtube shifters, or was it just a fashion thing?

Johnny

Bar-ends kept going for much longer than that on touring bikes (as I well remember from the Dawes brochures of my teens!) - they still pop up now & again but have lost a lot of ground to STI and Ergopower levers.

David

Interesting. I'd have thought bar ends would be the most sensible choice for touring bikes since there's so much less to go wrong with them.
 
I agree, they are still around especially for tourers. Also, let's remember that they popped up as the ideal solution for aero bars, so are fairly normal TT kit unless you have the electric stuff.
 
Hmmm!

I was told years ago from an old chap that bar end shifters was used in many early roads races
so they could keep their hands on the bars at all times due to the terrible road surface.
 
One of the odd results of the use of barends for TT bikes is that they now seem to have become elite kit.

It looks like Shimano used to do 105 barends, but now they only have Dura Ace ones - at Dura Ace prices :( Same goes for SRAM, it appears.
 
Johnsqual":3buif62q said:
One of the odd results of the use of barends for TT bikes is that they now seem to have become elite kit.

It looks like Shimano used to do 105 barends, but now they only have Dura Ace ones - at Dura Ace prices :( Same goes for SRAM, it appears.

Campag too - I think their bar-ends are only available in Record.

Must admit, when I posted my earlier comments about bar-ends for touring bikes, I'd forgotten all about TT bikes.

Personally I found them too much of a faff for CX - I once used a left-hand one for the front mech as a slight weight-saver (rear mech was on a Chorus Ergo lever) but it used to get knocked out of sync (being friction not index) when lifting or lowering the bike for the running sections.

David
 

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