RojoRacing
Donut Powered Wise-guy
Indeed, steering damping as applied to MBB has nothing to do with preventing tank slappers (and not just because you, technically, cannot have one due to lack of a tank ), but because of massive steering inertia - to get rid of 'twitchiness', which is basically feeling of insufficient control over the handlebars. I should note that is much less of a problem with smaller riders due to how boom length adjustement is set up on Cruzbikes.
Would you recommend a one-handed person to 'man up and ride it anyway - it will go away'? Riding MBB, especially with narrow bars, is kinda like riding one-handed when it comes to level of control over the front end, I suspect. I think this is just psycology at work - "we are not handicappped, therefore we should not use 'steering aids'" Well, if you enjoy a challenge, I agree. If you just want to maximize your speed, safety and comfort - this is an other thing entirely. Especially when 'riding it anyway' to full adaptation may take years, thousands of miles and even never actually happen. (There are multiple examples of that, but we don't seem them here due to classic survivorship bias).
BTW! You said it yourself that you'll never use narrow bars like one Larry uses - because 'it will never work in the mountains'. And what if a steering damper would allow you to use narrow bars, and achieve higher speeds on flats while retaining full control on bad roads and high-speed downhills? That is a testable hypothesis, actually.
I'd never tell a one arm man to man up, maybe arm up but never man up. I'd highly suggest a one armed rider a dampened steering setup on a bicycle because he's working with a highly comprising input setup and can only expect a somewhat compromise end result. A one armed rider would never expect to descend like Peter Sagan but setting up every other able bodied two armed person on a sluggish setup isn't fair to them ether, it puts a cap on what they can achieve.
I'm actually rather insensitive to those who lack the skills or desire to risk and adapt. My who life has been based around racing and risk. Don't expect me to go out of my way to help those who don't want to risk their own time or skin. I help people who are already trying to help themselves.
I feel Larry's setup is flawed in several ways for how I like to ride. If I was stuck with his narrow bar setup id be fine on the flats as is he but I'd probably need to persue a dampner for the mountains but again this is like the one armed man, it's a bandaid for a poor setup.