I learned from Grant that seamless shorts/pants and a good saddle are more 
important than padding. I actually got more comfortable on my usual 
20-40-mile rides when I switched to wool unpadded underwear and Swrve baggy 
shorts; tight, padded lycra didn't work well for me. I can't vouch for what 
works on centuries, though..my body doesn't seem to like that distance on 
*any* bike in *any* type of clothing ;)

On Wednesday, February 25, 2015 at 7:52:58 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:
>
>  On 02/25/2015 10:30 AM, Will wrote:
>  
> so... was all that discomfort related clothes... or related to position on 
> bike?
>  
>
> Clothes.  Cycling shoes eliminate foot pressure, cycling shorts have 
> padding and no seams to create pressure ridges.  The following year with no 
> changes other than clothing I did my first century in comfort.
>
> Also, I did not mention because it wasn't a critical factor in that 
> failure, but comparing lycra jerseys with cotton T shirts in hot and humid 
> conditions such as metro-DC area summers, it's clear that lycra is far 
> cooler and more comfortable.
>
> The longer distances you ride and the more difficult conditions, in 
> general the more clothing specific to the sport benefits you.  
>
> That's not to say it's absolutely essential: on the first century I did 
> complete, there was a kid who ride the whole thing barefoot on rat trap 
> pedals.  Don't ask me how, my feet would have been raw meat.
>
>
>  
>
> On Wednesday, February 25, 2015 at 8:53:57 AM UTC-6, Steve Palincsar 
> wrote: 
>>
>> On 02/25/2015 09:41 AM, Will wrote: 
>> > Why do you need to wear special clothes to ride? Not arguing, just 
>> > curious. I've been riding for about 50 years. Newspaper bikes as a 
>> > before teenage years, then Raleigh racers in college. Shorts and tee 
>> > shirt have always worked for me. What's the advantage of bike shop 
>> > attire? 
>>
>> I will never forget the first time I tried to ride a century.  It was 
>> 1973, and I had a P15 Paramount.  I was wearing a T shirt, BVDs, cut off 
>> denim jeans for shorts, some kind of sneakers and no gloves.  By the end 
>> of the ride I had branded into my memory the true meaning of the Johnny 
>> Cash song "Ring of Fire" -- blazing lines of pain on my backside from 
>> the seams on both underwear and denim shorts, parallel grooves of pain 
>> in my feet where the edges of the pedals had transmitted their pressure 
>> through the soles of my sneakers.  My hands felt as though they were on 
>> fire as well.  Every 10 miles or so I'd stop and lie down on the ground 
>> and try to will the agony away, but by mile 75 I realized I'd been 
>> wishing a dog would run out in front of me so I could crash and just lay 
>> down on the pavement.  At that point I stopped and waited for the SAG 
>> wagon.  It's the only time I've ever SAGged back from a century. 
>>
>>
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