I also strongly dislike the R7000/R8000 brifter shape. The hoods feel bulky 
and boxy, which leads to numb fingers for me. On top of that, I find the 
brake lever feel is weird, as if the pivot is too low. I've had both 
mechanical and hydro versions of this shifter and I hated both equally. 

12spd Di2 shifters on the other hand are ergonomically awesome. So are 
10/11spd Sram ones. 

KJ


On Wednesday, March 25, 2026 at 12:02:32 PM UTC-7 Patrick Moore wrote:

> People say that “brifter” brake hoods are very comfortable, but even after 
> futzing with the R8000 levers on the Roadeo to get the angle just right 
> (the tops of the hoods are pretty much dead level) I find that my sensitive 
> left palm starts getting numb or “tingly” after 10 or 12 miles riding on 
> the hoods, unless I diligently move it around. (And I don’t like the hooks 
> on the anatomic bar). Shimano’s non-shifting aero levers, OTOH, have been 
> my hood comfort benchmark for decades and do not cause that pressure 
> problem on the left palm.
>
> I wonder if I’ll have to start wearing gloves again, since this bike was 
> bought for longer rides.
>
> Can anyone suggest ways to improve this situation? Is there a “correct” or 
> at least “optimum” way to set up Shimano brifters? Are there tricks to 
> address this? There won’t be much leeway here, though, as I have the levers 
> set up pretty much perfectly for torso/arms/etc comfort on the hoods.
>
> I think that the difference is that, with the 7402s, I can rest the angle 
> between base of thumb and base of forefinger across the lever, which takes 
> up some of the pressure; the brifter does not seem to encourage this.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Lovely ride on the Roadeo just now: got the rd hanger alignment checked 
> and it’s fine, and ran some errands with multiple detours. The chain tracks 
> dead straight on the favorite 50 x 18 gear (14-32) so I can pretend I’m on 
> a 75” fixed gear. I know, I know. Still, the Roadeo does climb very nicely 
> when your climbing style is to sit or stand and push.
>
> Aside: PSA: I just bought a Planet Bike analogue tire gauge, with a big 
> dial marked from 20 psi to 140 psi, and good with Schrader and with adapter 
> with Presta. Only $17.95. The great benefit is that I can read the dial 
> without my reading glasses, while the otherwise very nice AccuGauge hp 
> gauge requires me to put them on every time I use it.
>
> -- 
>
> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Executive resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, letters, and other writing 
> services
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *When thou didst not, savage, k**now thine own meaning,*
>
> *But wouldst gabble like a** thing most brutish,*
>
> *I endowed thy purposes w**ith words that made them known.*
>

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