DooDah
Veteran
- Location
- France, now Northamptonshire
That is my business.Would you recommend the same techniques for dentistry work?
No
Out of interest, what would you do with the money you had saved by foregoing the bike fit?
That is my business.Would you recommend the same techniques for dentistry work?
No
Out of interest, what would you do with the money you had saved by foregoing the bike fit?
Would you recommend the same techniques for dentistry work?
Out of interest, what would you do with the money you had saved by foregoing the bike fit?
That is my business.
I am far from skint, and what business is it of yours, and why are you questioning my financial situation, do you need to borrow some money?So you're skint. Nothing to be ashamed of. We've all been there.
Maybe physio.
stick some tape around the seat tube to mark your preferred seat height or mark it with some tippex etc , the same goes for the handle bar angle on the stem which is about the only thing that will change up front unless you suddenly change your stem or move spacers about.Can I ask what else was changed, from what a novice can see it was obvious your seat was too low, I also take my bike with me when I go to work over in the US, which means I take off my seat, handle bars once I have done that will all the setting be wrong again? I keep wanting to do this & for those of you concerned about my finances the reason I haven't is I can't afford it.
Alan...
I often think about mentioning to other cyclists I see with their saddles too low or too high, but I decide they'll just tell me to sod off. If it were me, I might take some friendly advice, but you never know..
The guy who did it was a physio and looked into the way my body was built and how it operates before I got on the bike.
I see a lot of people who will gladly spend £150 on a few carbon bits that will knock a few grams off the bike where as I have decided to spend the money on something that will improve my riding and my long term health, seemed like a no brainer to me.