The design idea of the
The design idea of the bullhorn bars is to let the bars follow the arms and disappear into the hands, so that from an aero point of view, the arm, hand and bar become one entity. One entity is always better than two for aerodynamics, because the air is stopped from 'vibrating' between them. Every bit of turbulence that can be avoided is a plus. Time trial bars used in professional cycling indicated a path forward. On those arrangements, gear shifting is at the bar end, while brake levers remain on the conventional handlebars. I wanted to integrate shifting and braking together on one bar, with the bar pointing forward and strangely I discovered almost no precedent for this. And I wanted to have the grip area properly round, without the ridge caused be running a cable housing under the bar tape. All this was resolved in the Bullhorn Bars accessory we sell at Cruzbike. They have a specially designed set of shifters that run the cable inside the bar, and a set of lightweight brake levers. For one or two hour time trials, or for your usual morning ride, these have worked out very well.
Ultra marathon events like RAAM however bring a new challenge - finding the ergonomic solution for a rider who is on the bike not two hours a day but twenty hours a day.
If this is your riding mode, then specailly modded bars and alternative levers can assist, as I prepared for Maria Parker's RAAM bike. I'll discuss those in a blog in the coming days.