Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-16 Thread Mike Schiller
I'm just the opposite when mtb's came on the scene in the mid 80's, I 
switched to 90% mountain bikes for almost 2 decades.  But I still prefer 
drop bars. In fact I've been scheming to convert my steel 29er to mountain 
drops. Now with hydro discs for drop bars on the market ( TRP) it may be 
just the right time.  

~mike




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Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-16 Thread Tom Matchak
I have spent the past couple of seasons searching for an alternative to drop 
bars. I started with the classics (Albas and Moustache) but found these to be 
too wide or too convoluted. After lots of experimenting, I finally settled on 
classic Porteur bars, set up Moustache-style.

http://m.flickr.com/#/photos/34156114@N05/9146262436/

I am using both the Grand Bois Elysees bar and the Velo Orange Porteur bar, 
both in the flipped orientation. I have the straight section angled down 
about 10 deg, and the brake hoods are sloped down to provide the lever 
location/sweep that feels natural for my hands. There are some very subtle 
differences between these bars, and I like the curve on the VO model just a tad 
more, but I am comfortable with either one.

Porteur-style bars like these typically are set up with reverse brake levers or 
MTB levers and some sort of a thumb shifter, all of which limits the available 
hand positions. But the two models mentioned here take normal road bike brake 
levers and bar-end shifters, leaving the bar's sweep available for a range of 
hand positions. I also find that the forward position of the brake levers feels 
more secure and comfortable on a downhill.

Cheers,
Tom Matchak
Glen, NH

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Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-16 Thread stonehog
It may be that I'm morphing again, and should have trusted my gut 
originally.  I really enjoyed the VO Porteur bars on my AHH after not 
liking a set of 46cm Noodles, but I've since settled on 42cm Noodles for 
that bike.  However, I have the Albastaches on my Hunqa, and really like 
the full-time upright and forward brake positions.  I am also losing my 
interest in the extreme variation the Boscos give (on my backup commuter). 
 I am currently planning on stowing those for my next foray into cruisers 
or my elderly years, and getting back to the Porteur bars that are just so 
right.  They are narrow, have at least 3 hand positions, and do at least 
100k without hand pain.  Sticking with the Noodles for the long rides, 
however (over 200k).

Brian
Seattle, WA

On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 6:31:22 AM UTC-7, Tom Matchak wrote:

 I have spent the past couple of seasons searching for an alternative to 
 drop bars. I started with the classics (Albas and Moustache) but found 
 these to be too wide or too convoluted. After lots of experimenting, I 
 finally settled on classic Porteur bars, set up Moustache-style.

 http://m.flickr.com/#/photos/34156114@N05/9146262436/

 I am using both the Grand Bois Elysees bar and the Velo Orange Porteur 
 bar, both in the flipped orientation. I have the straight section angled 
 down about 10 deg, and the brake hoods are sloped down to provide the lever 
 location/sweep that feels natural for my hands. There are some very subtle 
 differences between these bars, and I like the curve on the VO model just a 
 tad more, but I am comfortable with either one.

 Porteur-style bars like these typically are set up with reverse brake 
 levers or MTB levers and some sort of a thumb shifter, all of which limits 
 the available hand positions. But the two models mentioned here take normal 
 road bike brake levers and bar-end shifters, leaving the bar's sweep 
 available for a range of hand positions. I also find that the forward 
 position of the brake levers feels more secure and comfortable on a 
 downhill.

 Cheers,
 Tom Matchak
 Glen, NH



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Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-15 Thread cyclotourist
Those elves make some mighty fine bikes!

Do you think you would go the Riv route with swept back bars, or more
of a straight bar set up?

On 10/14/13, dougP dougpn...@cox.net wrote:
 Just back from a tour involving rental bikes, my wife  I hopped on our
 Atlantii after recovering from jet lag.  What a difference!  Touring
 bikes are sometimes derided as heavy, clunky, slow, etc.,  but after
 several hundred miles on rental hybrids, an Atlantis feels like a sports
 car.  Even though the overall weight isn't much different (hey, we lugged
 our rentals up  down stairs, tossed them onto trains, etc.), the
 performance difference was enormous, especially climbing.  I can't tell you

 why but hills that would be of no consequence on my Atlantis were
 seriously consequential on the rental.  In their defense, I'm sure our
 rentals would retail well below US$1,000, so it's true that you get what
 you pay for.  Another unexpected consequence is we are both rethinking the
 drop bars on our Atlantii.  We were both more comfortable on the upright
 bars and there didn't seem to be any downside.  Pondering, pondering

 dougP

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Cheers,
David

it isn't a contest. Just enjoy the ride. - Seth Vidal

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Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-15 Thread dougP
I tried M'staches on another bike a few years ago  didn't care for the 
straight back portion.  The Origin 8 Space Bar on my old MTB has a nice 
amount of bend  seems to suit my anatomy.  The multiple hand positions on 
drops are really unbeatable, especially in the wind.  It's all some sort of 
compromise, though.  I needed a winter project so this may be it.  

The last couple of years I've had on'n'off hand issues with the drops,  
have been gradually raising them.  I'm at the max mark now.  On this trip, 
neither of us had any physical ailments, despite the low end nature of the 
bikes.  The bars were straight, flat, with rubber hand grips.  

dougP

On Monday, October 14, 2013 11:55:07 PM UTC-7, cyclot...@gmail.com wrote:

 Those elves make some mighty fine bikes! 

 Do you think you would go the Riv route with swept back bars, or more 
 of a straight bar set up? 

 On 10/14/13, dougP doug...@cox.net javascript: wrote: 
  Just back from a tour involving rental bikes, my wife  I hopped on our 
  Atlantii after recovering from jet lag.  What a difference!  Touring 
  bikes are sometimes derided as heavy, clunky, slow, etc.,  but after 
  several hundred miles on rental hybrids, an Atlantis feels like a sports 
  car.  Even though the overall weight isn't much different (hey, we 
 lugged 
  our rentals up  down stairs, tossed them onto trains, etc.), the 
  performance difference was enormous, especially climbing.  I can't tell 
 you 
  
  why but hills that would be of no consequence on my Atlantis were 
  seriously consequential on the rental.  In their defense, I'm sure our 
  rentals would retail well below US$1,000, so it's true that you get what 
  you pay for.  Another unexpected consequence is we are both rethinking 
 the 
  drop bars on our Atlantii.  We were both more comfortable on the upright 
  bars and there didn't seem to be any downside.  Pondering, pondering 
  
  dougP 
  
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 Cheers, 
 David 

 it isn't a contest. Just enjoy the ride. - Seth Vidal 


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Re: [RBW] Loving my Atlantis...let me count the ways

2013-10-15 Thread Eric Daume
I've tried to use drop bars for many, many years... high, low, classic
bend, flared mountain style, etc. Finally, I'm starting to realize I may
just be more comfortable on other bars. Maybe it's coming from a mountain
bike background, but there are just so many good shapes out there... Albas
(and the Soma Oxford knock off that I have), On One Marys, Surly Open
Bars... it seems we're living in the golden age of handle bars.

Yes, I sometimes miss the drops when grinding into a headwind, and I like
the feeling of grabbing the brake lever bodies while standing and climbing.
But for the other 95% of my riding, those alt-bend bars are way more
comfortable than drops.

Eric Daume
Dublin, OH


On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 11:30 PM, dougP dougpn...@cox.net wrote:

 Just back from a tour involving rental bikes, my wife  I hopped on our
 Atlantii after recovering from jet lag.  What a difference!  Touring
 bikes are sometimes derided as heavy, clunky, slow, etc.,  but after
 several hundred miles on rental hybrids, an Atlantis feels like a sports
 car.  Even though the overall weight isn't much different (hey, we lugged
 our rentals up  down stairs, tossed them onto trains, etc.), the
 performance difference was enormous, especially climbing.  I can't tell you
 why but hills that would be of no consequence on my Atlantis were
 seriously consequential on the rental.  In their defense, I'm sure our
 rentals would retail well below US$1,000, so it's true that you get what
 you pay for.  Another unexpected consequence is we are both rethinking the
 drop bars on our Atlantii.  We were both more comfortable on the upright
 bars and there didn't seem to be any downside.  Pondering, pondering

 dougP

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