ccf
Guru
Any thoughts on this?
http://trstriathlon.com/elliptical-chain-rings-dont-work-because-you-wont-let-them/
-Cliff
http://trstriathlon.com/elliptical-chain-rings-dont-work-because-you-wont-let-them/
-Cliff
I get the point you were going for. You mean that, for what your looking for, they make no measurable result in the final product; where that product is either: power or comfort that justifies the expense. Fair enough, and you owned that when you said "if you feel"... good... so what is it people feel?They make no difference at all except to your wallet.
I believe the favorable reviews may be due to confirmation bias - spend enough for something that comes with so many accolades and you just might feel like you need to go along with the popular consensus.
t's a bit like religion - if you feel it makes a difference in your life then go for it but I remain an agnostic on this subject until solid proof is presented.
Crap, I'm an ankler? Will I be shunned? I like my Qrings...but in truth, I can't actually tell any difference in any of the positions.[big snip]
Put a Qring on a bike; and pedal Set it at OCP 1 to start and try all the setting 1 through 5. The majority of people notice a huge difference. I ride in OCP4 and I can not stand OCP 1 nor 5. If you can't tell any different you are a natural ankler and you don't need the help.[/snip]
Not pretty enough. Would rather have a set of old-school drilled ("drillium") and/or panto rings. Those Italians know how to make beautiful hardware...Now though you know not to spend on them next; so you did learn something useful. You can always sell at half price to someone that wants to try them; put some beautiful Praxis round rings on and have money left for pizza
Not pretty enough.
trapdoor2 said:Will I be shunned?
ratz said:shift a praxis ring
Ooooooh. Great idea! Go 1X with a drillium old skool chainring up front.You could try a single ring. Aaargh, depravity!
t’s just that the oval ring is a CVT (continuously variable transmission)
trapdoor2 said:drillium old skool chainwheel
Somewhere around 1991, I bought my first bike-shop bicycle, a low-end DiamondBack MTB with SIS thumbshifters and slightly odd-looking chainrings that I later learned were called Biopace. The shop guy didn't use them as a selling point, or tell me much about them. All I knew was that the first time I rode more than my usual 6- or 7-mile loop on that MTB, 17 miles on rolling paved roads, my left quadriceps tendon threw a fit. For the three years I owned that bike, I consistently had pain above the left knee if I went more than 15 miles. I've never had that happen on any other bike before or since, upright or recumbent, round rings or elliptical, at any distance. It didn't occur to me that the Biopace chainrings might have been the problem until years later, when I discovered that a significant number of other people had similar difficulties with Biopace.I believe the favorable reviews may be due to confirmation bias - spend enough for something that comes with so many accolades and you just might feel like you need to go along with the popular consensus.
That makes sense. Elliptical chainrings and short cranks both reduce stress on the knees, but in different ways. The nice thing is that the effect is cumulative. Having both is better than either by itself.My kneeeeeeees say that Q Rings work!!!