Jeremy S
Dude
It does look like your problem would be solved by a shorter chainstay.The requested photo:
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Or a curved slider, or a steerer tube extender.
Multiple ways you could go here.
It does look like your problem would be solved by a shorter chainstay.The requested photo:
View attachment 7053
May be one day we shall see "New and improved S30v2 .. aka S33 , back by public demand"
Very nice dtseng, I wish I could afford a frame like yours 9.8Kg Ti bike! must be very responsive and compliant!Perhaps my bike is close enough to S33.
Head tube angle 72 deg, trail 68mm, WB 1028 mm, chain stay 430 mm, curved upper seat stay, back rest angle 34 degrees, whole bike weight 9.8 Kg.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IzAlmhF5to
Looks good!Riser added last week, and handlebars moved forward a comfortable amount. I still have room to cut the riser down another 5 to 10mm if I need to.
Made a neckrest this morning out of 1/16" x 1.25" aluminum bar stock from Lowe's. Repurposed the cushion and mounting bracket from the suspension adjustable headrest. I'll probably reinforce a few areas once I have the fit dialed in. (Yes, that's Gorilla Tape holding the bottom end of the bracket.)
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The riser was a good fit. There was just the right amount of steerer tube--about 1 1/4" to 1 1/2"--for it to clamp on to, no cutting needed. The brand the LBS uses is Delta. Not sure of the original length.I've been interested in a riser such as yours but I'm concerned that I'll have to cut off some of the steer tube to accommodate the added height. Was this an issue for you?
Your hands look lower than or at shoulder level. That looks good to me. But it might not feel good to you. Our bodies are notorious at detecting small changes. Always give your self a few rides over a couple of weeks to adapt and get used to a new position before you make any further/major changes or cut anything....
My hands felt a little high, and the handlebar a little too wide, at that riser height. I'll probably look at different handlebars before I decide on cutting the riser any more.
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And we missed you at BBB this year! I haven't made it to any of the Tuesday- or Thursday-night rides this summer, for various reasons. Hoping to get to the Encouragement Ride in the next week or two, once I have the full complement of chainring bolts again.I am late (very late!) to this thread. And I missed BBB this year.
Would be glad to hear it.I do have a handlebar recommendation if you get ready to go to a different bar.
Are you riding the Baptist Med Center Cyclists Curing Cancer ride in Sept?
Very true.Our bodies are notorious at detecting small changes. Always give your self a few rides over a couple of weeks to adapt and get used to a new position before you make any further/major changes or cut anything.
I have, and it might. But for me, the advantages of the upside-down position so far outweigh the desire to lower the hands.Have you also considered flipping the handlebars to their normal dropbar position? That may bring the hands slightly lower perhaps
@Balor I am having a difficult time seeing that in my mind. Can you draw a comparison picture? I would think that shorter cranks would put your knee closer to you, but I'm probably misunderstanding.When you go with short cranks, you can move the bars much farther away without 'thigh conflict' and get away with "seagull" MTB bars with no drop, that also solves 'fully getting up' issue.
You will need MTB dual controls though (I have those, work fine but 9-speed only) or grip shifters. Sram has those and really cheap btw (NX).
Let's say you shorten the cranks 20 mm. When the pedal is nearest you, it's now 20 mm farther away than it was before, so your knee isn't as bent. When the pedal is farthest away from you, it's 20 mm closer than it was, so your leg won't be as fully extended as it was before.I would think that shorter cranks would put your knee closer to you, but I'm probably misunderstanding.