tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5238439994538161089.post4959590623539895528..comments2023-03-23T03:37:44.890-07:00Comments on The Handlebar Chronicles: The Idea of the "All-Rounder" BarJeremyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02555455137344047158noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5238439994538161089.post-87015772977999442212013-02-17T13:24:57.852-08:002013-02-17T13:24:57.852-08:00I haven't tried the Jones bars and their vario...I haven't tried the Jones bars and their various licensed and unlicensed copies (Soma just came out with one in 4130 that looks nice), but they have intrigued me. Not just his bars but Jones' overall approach to bike designs definitely jives with my sensibilities. If I did more full-on MTBing I'd probably be looking at one of his bikes. <br /><br />I should dig up a picture of my old beater town bike. With swept back bars it fit great, but it had kind of a wonky geometry--72 parallel made even slacker by a longer retrofitted fork. It measured at 62cm but it had a fairly short headtube, and just enough fork extension above the headtube to clamp a stem, that's it. I had those swept-back Nittos on a 135 minus 15 degree stem (IIRC), and that felt good. <br /><br />I was hoping to replicate a similar position on the Quickbeam, but with swept-back bars it just felt way too upright given bigger frame and Riv geometry with extended headtube, etc. I was getting problems with the bars I was using having a slightly undersized clamp area and rotating in pretty much any stem. I didn't pursue the swept back bars further since once I put in the current flat bars, it felt the best--as I describe above, upright yet speedy. Jeremyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02555455137344047158noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5238439994538161089.post-86575361714697990222013-02-16T12:33:59.609-08:002013-02-16T12:33:59.609-08:00Have you tried the jones h-bars at all? I've ...Have you tried the jones h-bars at all? I've had the titec copies on my actual mountain bike for a few years now and I love the multiple hand positions they provide. The newer loop version of that bar seems even better (http://www.jonesbikes.com/h-bar.html) I haven't tried em on a cross/all rounder bike yet because I've been pretty happy with the open bars, but at some point I probably will. <br /><br />Maybe it owes to my being pretty average in height (5' 11") and proportions but I've not found longer top tubes to be totally essential when setting up swept back bars. I just use longish stems, my travel bike when set up with drops uses a 100/7* stem with 50 or so mm of spacers, but when I use open bars on it I use a 120 or 130mm/7* stem with maybe 25-30mm of spacers. I know some people think longer stems can make the bike handle weird (or have an aesthetic aversion to them) but with swept back bars I think it's better to have a longer stem than a super long top tube, because with a shorter stem your hands end up behind the steering axis of the bike which tends to (depends on overall bike geometry of course) end up biasing the weight distribution of the bike too much to the rear. This is also something that I like about that new jones loop bar is that it sweeps forward significantly and then back allowing for a shorter/average length stem than would normally be needed. <br /><br />Mileshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04532770362809569806noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5238439994538161089.post-21325694693275039322013-02-14T09:09:25.610-08:002013-02-14T09:09:25.610-08:00Hi Miles- No problem at all with the long comment...Hi Miles- No problem at all with the long comment. I want this blog to be a place for discourse! <br /><br />We definitely did seem to follow a similar evolution, including being influenced by mc's love of the flared drop (see my earlier "Inspiration: mc" post). I also used had a fixed gear town bike with Nitto "All-Rounder" bars (<a href="http://store.somafab.com/nib3allro.html" rel="nofollow">these guys</a>) that were similar to Open Bars, if not as wide. Loved that thing, and used to use the forward sections of the bar as an "aero" position for battling headwinds down Howard St. in SOMA. <br /><br />I 100% agree about the Cowbells too--I just mounted up a pair to my road bike and they're they best drop bars I've tried in a while. It's like salsa combined all of the best aspects of full-on flared drops, rando bars, and contemporary compact bend bars in one awesome package. <br /><br />I'm not sure why I have this idea, but I keep coming back to the idea that an "all-rounder" bar isn't a drop bar, but rather a flat bar that allows multiple hand positions. I think that things like the Open Bar and Rivendell/Nitto's new "Bosco" Bar have similar thinking behind them, but like flared drops, both also need a fairly specific geometry (long TT, short HT?) for them to give anything but a bolt-upright position in the primary hand position. Which is cool too, if that's what you're looking for. Jeremyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02555455137344047158noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5238439994538161089.post-1884338632029595042013-02-13T20:57:13.845-08:002013-02-13T20:57:13.845-08:00This is a long ass comment, sorry for that but It&...This is a long ass comment, sorry for that but It's interesting to hear from someone else who seems to have gone through a somewhat similar thought evolution with regards to fit and trying different types bars. I too was (and still am to some extent) enamored with flared drop bars after learning of them from matt chester and since have mostly moved to more traditional drop bars for my roadish bikes. <br /><br /> The point of departure for me is that I've always thought of midge bars and other extreme flared drops more as off road specific drop bars that happen to be alright for riding on the road than "all rounders". I was interested in them because I wanted drops that were awesome for more mountain bikey (singletrack!) pursuits because I was just more comfortable on drops and disliked flat bars. I also wanted to be able to comfortably ride the 5-10 miles to the trails and be able to do an all day ride with some relatively serious singletrack and a bunch of fire roads and pavement mixed in. <br /><br /> The midge bars worked great for this for me for a number of years (having a custom hunter that put them in the right place helped a lot) but when salsa came out with the cowbell bars they seemed like what I had been looking for in the first place. They are pretty awesome for actual singletrack in the drops, while having waaay more usable tops and hoods and allowing for a more standard fit without wacky stem or super long head tubes and have replaced the midges on my monster cross combined with a less risey, 7 versus 25 degrees, stem.<br /><br />As far as a flat all rounder bar goes, I have been really into the surly open bar for the past few years for my adventurey/travel bike. I too was initially scared off by the lack of multiple hand positions but for me the angle is just right to avoid numbness and if I do feel like moving my hands around I just put them on the curve of the bar in front of the brake levers. It also seems to dampen vibration pretty nicely being that it's wide and pretty light weight steel. <br />Mileshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04532770362809569806noreply@blogger.com