You will probably just try them all at some point if you are anything like 
me, but my faves over the years have been the Porteurs, the Albastaches, 
and Noodles.  It may take a while to get comfy on a Noodled bike, but they 
are great for longer rides if you put the time into finding the right 
coordinates.  For me that was 1-2cm above saddle height.  I find myself 
migrating back to uprights now due to my love of 
off-road/gravel/exploratory stuff.  Choco's look to be perfect, but I 
haven't gotten time to put them on my Hunqa yet.

Brian Hanson
Seattle, WA
www.stonehog.com

On Thursday, April 28, 2016 at 1:11:13 AM UTC-5, Eric Karnes wrote:
>
> Thanks all! 
>
> I may give the drops another shot...I agree that this bike looks pretty 
> sweet with them and I've always suffered from a bit of drop bar envy. But 
> with anything longer than a 50mm stem (even with the bars high), I start to 
> feel it in my back and neck pretty quick. Maybe I'll bring it to the LBS 
> and see if they have any suggestions. I'll also check out the Jitensha 
> Bars...do users of those find them to have enough hand positions? If only 
> the Choco bars came with an option a few mm narrower like the Boscos...
>
> As it's my first Rivendell, I can't really speak to how it compares with 
> other models. But I rode it a few more times this week and would describe 
> it as a really wonderful mix of sporty and stable. I don't go super fast 
> when I'm riding, but I love the feel of a light, sporty steel road bike 
> (like my 531 mid-eighties Trek). This frame has that really nice quality, 
> but also feels much more stable when descending and turning (even with bars 
> that weren't specifically designed for it...which I feel speaks to 
> Rivendell's fantastic geometry). My old Trek feels squirrelly on rougher 
> roads and gravel. But with Jack Browns, it works flawlessly on crushed 
> gravel paths...and still feels quick and responsive. Even though it's 
> marketed as a 'club-ride' bike, like any Rivendell, it excels at lots of 
> different tasks. I wouldn't take it on single track, but with some 35mm 
> Cyclocross tires, I'd feel totally comfortable doing rougher dirt paths, 
> fire roads, etc. It's feels like a solid-enough bike.
>
> Eric
>
>
>
> On Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at 5:32:16 PM UTC-4, Evan E. wrote:
>>
>> Welcome to the list, Eric! Beautiful bike.
>>
>> [General note to the posters on this thread: Velo Orange makes Porteur 
>> bars in 22.2 and also in 23.8. But since this is the Riv list, maybe think 
>> about Choco Normal bars?]
>>
>>
>>
>>

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