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#16 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 11
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Back to cazorp orginal question I forgot to say, your saddle hieght isn't set by how far you feet are from ground when seated. It depends on the bike and type of riding. My Road Bike, Trail Bike, DH Bike, Free Ride Bike and DirtJumper are all different. For example my DH bike Im almost flat footed on the ground, the DJ flat footed both for better control when riding tricky stuff and usally pedaling hard & standing, road and trail bike can't touch the ground unless I dismount the sadlle, up for more power since your pedaling a lot more. My free ride bike some were in the middle of those extremes. Hope that helps.
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#17 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 284
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Quote:
Yeah, I'm paying the piper now. I had an interval workout the other day and did it after placing my cleat a little farther back (too far) - wow, I'm sore, my right calve all the way down to the achilles on one leg is super tender, including the ankle joint. I've corrected the cleat (slid it forward a bit). I really should know better; always one adjustment at a time and small adjustments during an easier workout - to let the body adapt. Lesson learned. Also, I am going to see a chiro, I think my hip is rotating -cause some days the same position feels completely perfect, then the next day it feels like my knees aren't tracking straight, and that I'm pedalling squares. Very awkward trying to adjust for it constantly. Thanks |
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#18 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Winston Salem, NC
Posts: 20
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Quote:
Thanks
__________________
You are more than the sum of what you consume. Desire is not an occupation - KMFDM Dogma |
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#19 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 11
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A good starting point for your saddle fore/aft position is related to your knee position over the peddle spindle. To start have have the peddles parallel with the ground and use a weighted plum line hung from the front of the knee, this is usally set even or just slightly behind. It is also affected by your crank length. Depending on the type of riding you are doing when I triathlete I was set just even now I do more DH a free ride it is set back 3-6mm from tyhe spindle on my road and trail bikes, the DH free ride it is less important I feel and haven't really measured it though I use the same shoe cleat but a shorter crank. Hope that helps
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