hi Jinxed - beautiful set up.  I have an old road bike frame project in the 
mill.  Can you measure drop on your bars for me?  The 345mm overall drop 
listed by on-one for these bars makes no sense.  Thanks

On Friday, March 15, 2013 7:15:01 PM UTC-5, jinxed wrote:
>
> OK. So after some excellent and insightful RBW list input I went ahead and 
> ordered the OnOne Midge bars some Cane Creek levers, and some Kenda MTB 
> tires.
>
> My immediate goal was to alter the hand positions. I've been pretty 
> content with the mustache bar set up, but have come to really enjoy the 
> flats and wide sram hoods of my cross bike. My default position on the 
> m-bars was basically on the very ends with my palms hanging over the bar 
> end shifters. I thought adding the closer brake position and the flats of a 
> more traditional drop bar would be a welcome change.
>
> As soon as the bars came in, I was happy I made the purchase, even if they 
> dont remain on the Rivendell. Right out of the box they looked 
> interestingly comfortable. NICE wide top flat section, short reach, tight 
> and short drop. They flair but not out of control. I had heard the drop 
> section was short, and it is, but to me seemed perfect. 
>
> I got them installed with a vacant stem so I wouldnt have to completely 
> disassemble my M-bar set up. The stem is a little too long, but the short 
> reach on the bar still pulled the levers back vs the m-bar. I set up the 
> Midge essentially parallel with the ground with the drops pointing down. 
> The levers then become a nice flat extension of the bar and make for some 
> good hand placement real estate! The flair on the midge is restrained 
> enough to still use the tops of the lever hoods. This is what I was looking 
> for.
>
> I also wanted to add some knobbage to the marathonesque bonty tires I was 
> using without going full on 2.1 mtb. I am VERY happy I ran across the Kenda 
> Klimax 1.9 tires. They were exactly what I wanted. Good enough knobs to hit 
> some aggressive singletrack, but civilized on the pavement.
>
> So now in V.3.0 I took to the road so to speak. I did a nice meandering 
> 30+ mile ride in mixed terrain to get some initial impressions. The extra 
> width and positions of the bars were very welcome in varying conditions. 
> Having the flats gave a nice upright comfortable cruising placement and 
> then the wide hoods were awesome in the dirt. I was so impressed with the 
> feel off road, I would consider these on my dedicated mtb. The drops worked 
> surprisingly well on the couple steep dirt climbs I encountered too. I had 
> quick access to the shifters without having to move away from reaching the 
> brakes. So overall I think this is a positive change.
>
> I will say this however...when you ride a 700c CX bike and a 29er 
> MTB...jumping on a 26" feels SO SLUGGISH. I kept checking to see if my 
> brakes were dragging! I kept wondering if I could shoehorn a 650b in there 
> and get some brakes to work! The AR is an awesome bike, but I will say that 
> my old too small Bleriot felt loads more efficient.
>
> Here is a beautiful shot of the garage door with the newly altered bike 
> obscuring the view.
>
> http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8531/8561112128_8bc9a3e879_b.jpg
>

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