CruzinCambridge
Active Member
A little while back I did a professional bike fit on my diamond frame bike and made small adjustments to my stem and seat position to get my fit dialed in. The fitter analyzed my power curve through my pedal stroke and moved my saddle a little forward and down to better engage my glutes in the 1-3 portion of the pedal rotation among other things. He took photos from the side and was able to measure my knee bend and hip bend see where my knee was relative to the pedal spindle drawing a virtual plumb bob on the photo.
Is there anybody doing anything like this on the Cruzbike? Hard to drop a plumb bob off the knee and hard to know where exactly three o'clock is in the pedal stroke on a Cruzbike. I spent most of the fall and winter playing with my boom to optimize the pedal stroke and clearance. When the bottom bracket is too close, I feel it in my knees, but I've noticed my current position doesn't feel like I'm engaging my glutes or hamstrings enough. I'm wondering if a shorter chainstay will effectively bring my saddle forward. I've been combing ebay for shorter cranks that will work with my setup so that will probably be my first move.
Anybody else have theories on the biomechanics of the front triangle setup of their Cruzbike?
Is there anybody doing anything like this on the Cruzbike? Hard to drop a plumb bob off the knee and hard to know where exactly three o'clock is in the pedal stroke on a Cruzbike. I spent most of the fall and winter playing with my boom to optimize the pedal stroke and clearance. When the bottom bracket is too close, I feel it in my knees, but I've noticed my current position doesn't feel like I'm engaging my glutes or hamstrings enough. I'm wondering if a shorter chainstay will effectively bring my saddle forward. I've been combing ebay for shorter cranks that will work with my setup so that will probably be my first move.
Anybody else have theories on the biomechanics of the front triangle setup of their Cruzbike?