trapdoor2 wrote: What Maria
trapdoor2 wrote:
What Maria needs is less an aero-helmet than a very comfortable one. Riding 12hrs with one of those TT
helmets would be a horrible pain in the neck!
I agree. And looking at the photo of Maria on her bike I'd reckon that the helmet she wore was pretty much as aerodynamic as a reasonable amount of money can buy!!
I would suggest taking some head on shots of Maria in her riding position, because I think there may be more to be picked up efficiency-wise with different handlebars. While the Origin bars are obviously good for everyday use, I have a belief that one's arms are spread out and create an inverted funnel, trapping air.
If the 'bars are the same width as the shoulders and the hands are at a point that is roughly level with the shoulders, then the arms are virtually pointing straight into the wind.
For wrist discomfort/pain reasons (and that's another story already covered in a thread), I went back to "standard" road bars, and by tilting the STI levers out just a little, I have no problems with leg contact during gear changing, but I feel I roll a little faster than I used to. At the moment I have even taken to putting my hands "up on the hoods", whilst going along on the flat and downhill, to accentuate the straightening of the arm, pointing them more. When I need to pull on the bars I "drop down" onto the grips again.
Just a suggestion.
And in relation to the front "Carbo-yoke", which is like a flat bar the wrong way into the air, I have thought that a piece of cylindrical "foam" with a slot down the middle, forming 2 Ds, joined on one edge of the D top or bottom corner, could be slid onto and maybe glued, taped, tied around most of the yoke, thus presenting an elliptical profile to the wind.
Regards,
John R.