5'6.75", 168 lbs and in the green zone on Ken's chart. Is the green zone intended to imply that a buyer can expect the Cruzbike to fit "out of the box", without additional cost mods? Or does the green zone indicate that with sufficient effort and, perhaps, additional expense one can expect to get a workable fit?
I could ride my S40 with the stock setup, but I certainly wouldn't consider it optimal -- or even reasonable. Swapping in a short chainstay, and to a lesser extent changing the 700C wheels for 650B, improved the fit enormously. I find it very odd that the existence of different length chainstays is not mentioned anywhere on the Cruzbike retail website (that I could find) and I'm enormously grateful to have seen them mentioned here on the forum. I do wish the seat had some adjustment, since us untall folks have considerably less weight on the front/driven wheel and end up with a higher BB height, despite our shorter legs. I'm considering getting the extra, super, mondo thick Ventisit seat pad to move myself further forward in the seat, giving weight on the front wheel more like what I suspect the design intended and allowing the BB to be rotated downward a bit.
... My sister is much shorter (5’2” ish) and is borderline green/yellow. ... She currently rides a P38. She bought a Bachetta but she was uncomfortable with the seat height to ground.
I came to the S40 from a Bacchetta Giro A20, which has a 20" front wheel to get the seat lower. Bacchetta's stick bikes can be a tough fit for shorter folks, since adjusting the seat forward to adjust the distance to the pedals for shorter legs also raises the seat -- which is exactly the opposite interaction one would hope for.
... point being that the CB by nature has 3 base varibles and 7 custom variables. stock: 1. seat position; 2. crank position, top tube extension length. custom: 1. stay length, 2. top tube shape, 3. steer tube height (not all models); 4. seat type, 5. handle bar type and 6. crank length. 7. wheel size (not all models)
a normal df has a lot fewer variables in terms of adjustability.
3BS, can you explain further what is meant by a "base variable" vs a "custom variable"? Is the differentiator that the listed component is supplied stock with the bike vs not? Aren't all the "adjustments" listed also available on a DF, with even more options for the DF? This would include the fact that the typical DF is available in 3-8 frame sizes so frame size is also "adjustable" at time of purchase.
I think of fit as being defined by geometric variables; e.g. seat height, BB height above seat pan, seatback incline angle, BB distance from seat back/pan junction, etc ... Some adjustability can then be designed into the various components to achieve the ranges of fit desired for those geometric variables. For myself, some fore/aft adjustment of the seatpan and minor seatback incline variability would be enormously helpful.
-Jack
Raleigh, NC