I've had the RH rando bars and the chaco bars on my Sam, which is from the 
last run. I like them both a lot. I'm going with the chaco bars now though 
- plenty of room to roam, I can stretch out if I want, and i feel like the 
most recent Rivendell's are really well suited for upright bars vs drops 
(except maybe the Roadini). 


On Friday, November 17, 2023 at 3:29:20 AM UTC-8 ascpgh wrote:

> Most drops now anticipate brake/shift levers with a longer dimension from 
> the bar clamp to the lever pivot. That extension of the lever body 
> triggered a slew of shorter reach bends that cheat those of us who love 
> generous ramps ahead of the hoods. Talk about complicating the field for 
> your choice.  
>
> When STI arrived there was a bit of struggle for those who loved riding 
> the hoods/ramps but could feel how expended they were from previous brake 
> hood positioning. Shorter stems were a quick dimensional solution but 
> closed the distance to the tops, depth of hooks and knee clearance if 
> sticking with a favorite bar with the new brake/shifters. I was and am 
> still a bar-end shifter across my fleet and like the range of handholds for 
> the spectrum of positions from which I address the effort input of riding. 
> Some of the brifter-tailored, widely flared and shallow drop bars 
> significantly limit the number of hand positions and worse, for me, lock 
> those holds by limited wandering from any of them. The Midge bar on the 
> tandem has to go because of this. My body rejects being locked into any 
> position for very long at all as I ride, even if the terrain doesn't vary.
>
> I have Nitto RM-013 bars on both my commuter and Rambouillet and make 
> great use of their generous ramp length (not designed presuming brifters) 
> but on my Coast rando I chose the RH rando bar for the additional contours 
> of the tops for wandering hands and anticipated longer hours on the bike. I 
> imagined that with different steering geometry a different bar would be 
> good for my proprioception and new, distinct muscle memories as I switch 
> back and forth between the others. It took a little bit riding to get 
> accustomed to and make use of the attributes of the new bend after riding 
> the same bars for 20 years before but really does work for me.
>
> Andy Cheatham
> Pittsburgh
>
> On Thursday, November 16, 2023 at 11:17:20 AM UTC-5 modemm...@gmail.com 
> wrote:
>
>> Eh, I'm really thinking of going back to a drop bar of some sort - 
>> there's 100000000000 of them out there, and it seems ones with shallower 
>> drops and mid to high flare are going to make the drops usable.  And I 
>> probably want something with a longer ramp for even more position 
>> variability.  There are just. so. many. bars. now.
>>
>> On Thursday, November 16, 2023 at 10:47:53 AM UTC-5 Johnny Alien wrote:
>>
>>> I love handlebar discussions. I am a pretty big fan of the Albastache 
>>> bars and generally have moved to them in instances where I would normally 
>>> use drops. Similar to you I don't really ride in the drops so Noodles just 
>>> don't have the same amount of options. That said I also love the look and 
>>> traditional feel of drops. I plan to try out the Blue Lug specific variant 
>>> of the Noodles. They are the same bar but with shallower drops and less 
>>> reach. It seems like that could be perfect and make riding in the drops 
>>> more accessible. As far as anything that would keep you with road levers 
>>> for brifters thats about the only options. Albastache bars are clunky set 
>>> up that way because of the way you need to throw the lever to shift. I have 
>>> only held off trying the BL bars because I am waiting for a stem I want to 
>>> come in so that shipping makes more sense.
>>>
>>> Now if you do want to move toward a thumb shifter route for road bikes I 
>>> cannot recommend the Losco bars enough. So good for a sweptback road 
>>> experience.
>>>
>>> On Thursday, November 16, 2023 at 9:54:02 AM UTC-5 modemm...@gmail.com 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I have a 2016 Sam, from the batch of completes that year.  I love the 
>>>> bike, and now that I'm riding a lot more (my wife was gifted with being 
>>>> able to ride again after not being able to for years; she has a '16 Sam 
>>>> too), I swapped bars from the stock (Nitto Noodle) to an Albastache.  
>>>>
>>>> The Noodle was only giving me ONE hand position, on the hoods.  The 
>>>> drops didn't feel usable to me and the flats are just too narrow for my 
>>>> comfort.  The hoods position was putting a lot of pressure on the meaty 
>>>> part of my hands behind the thumbs.
>>>>
>>>> The 'Stache fixes that and gives me a lot of hand positions - on the 
>>>> "hoods" (but it's a big flat on the 'Stache of course), behind them, and 
>>>> pretty much all along the rest of the bar.  I like it, but...
>>>>
>>>> I do miss the hand position that only comes from having a drop bar on 
>>>> being on those hoods in that orientation; I just need one that will put 
>>>> them in a spot that doesn't put all the weight on the meaty-hand-part 
>>>> behind the thumbs.
>>>>
>>>> I have to admit I also miss how the bike looks with a drop bar. O_o  I 
>>>> dunno, I guess the bike just "wants" that look, to me.
>>>>
>>>> I'd also like to not run the shifters as barend shifters... So I'd go 
>>>> thumbie or some type of (SHHHH DON'T TELL GRANT) brifter. 
>>>>
>>>> The other issue I don't have access to the funds that some others 
>>>> around here seem to. :)  These bikes were EXPENSIVE to us ($2,600 a pop 
>>>> and 
>>>> we've added front and rear racks, fenders, etc.)
>>>>
>>>> Ideas, comments, questions, help, etc, etc?  I'm sure lots around here 
>>>> have Sams and have done this handlebar/cockpit rodeo lots of times!
>>>>
>>>

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