![]() |
View
New Forum Topics Today's Forum Topics Set as homepage |
|
|||||||
Welcome to CyclingForums.com You are currently viewing our website as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions. You will have to register before you can post to this thread. By joining our free online community you will have access to post new topics, communicate privately with other cyclingforums.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload photos and access other special features like product reviews and classifieds. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Springfield MA
Posts: 280
|
I come from a backpacker background that gravitated into mtn biking as a weekday thing when I couldn't strap on the ol' Kelty and disappear in the craggy basalt of Western Mass....
Then I discovered BIKEPACKING - but I couldn't (Can't) shake the flat bar (with long curved bar ends). I've gone to a nice hybrid with 700c's (I ride 28mm Armadillos - thin but tough as the nails I regularly ride over) but I just don't see the need for drops! Most of the bikers I see are riding the damn hoods ANYWAY! And I have that position (even better as I can stretch out my fingers across the bullhorns) Now... I do think that some Aeros might be nice... but I like my long stem "0 degree" with a flat and flattened out bullhorns Any other nonconformists out there? |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: SW Washington, USA
Posts: 52
|
If you scan all the touring forums, you'll find that a good portion of touring bikes (I'd estimate 30%-40%) are set up with flat bars. That's hardly non-conformist
![]() But (here's my personal opinion) if you checked with long-distance tourers -- the ones who spend a month or more on the road ("road" is key here) -- more than 90% will be using drop bars. And tourers, in general, are not elitist or purists; what I mean is, they do it for efficiency and comfort, not cuz it's a gang color or sumthin. Try cycling across Montana into a headwind some day (and the next day, and the next, and the next). Or searching for a fifth hand position after the first four have left your fingers tingling. I can go for 1- or 2-day rides with my mtn bike, but loaded up and headed for the next state, I'll be on drop bars instead. Your long bar ends give a lot of this flexibility, too, but not quite all. Lots of people have flat-bar tourers, especially for cost considerations (if it means buying a new bike/components), if they're touring partially off-road, or if it's not l-o-n-g distance. There's no bar test (or distance test) to post in the touring forums Nope, you're not an outsider. Maybe "touring/trekking" is the purist form of the sport, since people seem to gravitate here from either end of the spectrum -- mtn bikes or light road bikes.There's something to be said for choosing what's comfortable. If you like your ride, ride what ya got! -- Mark |
|
|
|