I’ve seen a few people around my area with grips on the drops on their 
gravel bikes. Like, ones that flare out and offer an ergonomic position 
kind of like Ergon grips on a flat bar. Each time was on a bike that gets 
ridden a *lot. *Could be worth looking in to?

On Saturday, 21 March 2026 at 14:56:15 UTC+10:30 [email protected] wrote:

> (tl;dr? Just to the bottom for the questions.)
>
> I've been experiencing numbness in my outside fingers on my 61cm Roadini 
> with 54cm Noodle bars on an 8cm Tallux stem. Particularly after 30 or so 
> miles of on-road riding. It's become clear that most of the numbness comes 
> from gripping the bottom curve of the drops so I can keep my index fingers 
> on the brakes when riding curvy roads, downhill, and in areas with traffic 
> and driveways/intersections where quick brake access is needed. I get much 
> less numbness when I'm riding the flats of the drops near the bar end, and 
> that numbness is not focused on the outside fingers. 
>
> I ride the drops nearly exclusively; I find the tops give me less control 
> and the hoods feel too far away. Back in the 1990s, I routinely rode my 
> Nishiki's tops with safety brakes, but I've never liked riding so far 
> forward as to favor the hoods. That hasn't changed now that I'm riding a 
> road bike again. I rode a 58cm Trek Domane last fall for a month and found 
> that riding the hoods was uncomfortable and quick to numb my hands, and the 
> whole far-forward geometry made me feel unstable and the 44cm handlebars 
> reduced my range of motion. (I have wide shoulders, and so I previously 
> rode an XL Trek FX3 hybrid for the width and stability; the L size that the 
> Trek bike shop recommended was again too small.) 
>
> Riding the wide drops on the Roadini and reaching the brakes from the 
> drops not the hoods took care of all that.
>
> Still, with the hand numbness on longer Roadini rides, I thought maybe I 
> should get gloves with greater padding than my current ones, especially as 
> I am riding longer distances (I've done a couple metric centuries and a 
> true century planned for summer). When I went to the LBS to check out the 
> Specialized Body Geometry Dual Pad gloves, they suggested I get a quick fit 
> check in case the issue was about fit not gloves.
>
> The bike fitter absolutely hated the Roadini: too big, too wide, quill 
> stems are bad, handlebar not ergonomic, and I shouldn't be riding the drops 
> routinely. I know from test-riding a buddy's 57cm Roadini and from my month 
> on the 58cm Domane that my 61cm Roadini is not too big. Yes, the reach to 
> the hoods is further than on the Domane, but it's fine to the tops and 
> drops, where I ride. I had seen the Riv posts about their thoughts on 
> handlebar width and geometry being so different from the major 
> manufacturers, but I didn't get how diametrically opposed they are until 
> the bike fitter's clear disgust. Wow!
>
> Anyhow, the Roadini is an incredibly comfortable bike, and I can go a good 
> pace on the road and feel fully stable on turns and stops, unlike with the 
> Domane. 
>
> Still, I wonder two things, and would live to get people's comments:
>
>    - What are your thoughts on reducing or preventing hand numbness, 
>    especially in my riding position of my hand at the base of the curve with 
>    my index finger on the brake levers ("trigger finger" position) That bike 
>    fitter thought the resulting hand angle was causing undue pressure, but I 
>    can figure out any adjustment to address that.
>    - Should I be trying to find a way to ride the tops more? (That is, 
>    how concerning is it that I am so drops-oriented?)
>
> Thanks!
>
>

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