Handlebars and Spectacles?!?!

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Cuchilo

Prize winning member X2
Location
London
I don't need to wear glasses . The only time i wear them is to ride my road bike or TT bike so i don't get flies in my eyes .
 
Location
Loch side.
I wear glasses and have ridden 667 miles since buying my bike last October I very rarely use the drops (only on downhills) the hoods are a comfortable position for me

Mine are varifocals too

Varifocals only with with butterfly bars. Everybody knows that.
 

KneesUp

Guru
fignon-4502512058.jpg


There's bloody Laurent Fignon winning the 1984 Tour in his specs. The big French show off. They've cropped the bike out so you can't tell he's riding his mum's shopper because it had flat bars.
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
This may be controversial, but my opinion, and that's all it is, an opinion, is that he's an imbecile.


(Speccy drop bar bike rider)
 

tyred

Squire
Location
Ireland
I do admit to having an issue with glasses sliding down my nose and ending up looking over the top of them (and yes it can cause a stiff neck) but it happens on all bar types. It even happens when sitting eating dinner.

No pair of glasses I've ever had has fitted me properly no matter how much the optician (different ones used over the years) adjusts them so I must have an odd-shaped head. I guess I need somewhere to store my huge brain!
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
Yeah, imbecile. From the brief discussions we have on here from time to time I get the impression that I ride on the drops more than average, and I'm a speccy four eyes. To be fair though I did pick my specs specifically so they would be wearable on the bike. My old pair were less suitable.
 

Sharky

Guru
Location
Kent
It is a bit miss guided to quote spectacles as a reason for not buying a dropped bar bike. I have always ridden drops and consider them to be "flat" bars with an additional bendy bit, giving you more varied hand positions.

But the sales man I think was referring to a consequence that spectacles may introduce, namely bad fitting glasses and lack of suppleness could cause a rider to be looking over the top of their glasses or to be straining the neck too much causing neck ache. None of which are strong enough reasons for not buying a bike with drops.

I wear glasses for short sight and have worn them for cycling, but it was night time riding and in damp conditions, causing them to mist up that resulted me riding without glasses at all for most of the time. Should my eyesight deteriate it would probably make me consider contacts as a solution.
 

steve50

Disenchanted Member
Location
West Yorkshire
It is a bit miss guided to quote spectacles as a reason for not buying a dropped bar bike. I have always ridden drops and consider them to be "flat" bars with an additional bendy bit, giving you more varied hand positions.

But the sales man I think was referring to a consequence that spectacles may introduce, namely bad fitting glasses and lack of suppleness could cause a rider to be looking over the top of their glasses or to be straining the neck too much causing neck ache. None of which are strong enough reasons for not buying a bike with drops.

I wear glasses for short sight and have worn them for cycling, but it was night time riding and in damp conditions, causing them to mist up that resulted me riding without glasses at all for most of the time. Should my eyesight deteriate it would probably make me consider contacts as a solution.

Used this a lot when i rode motorcycles, works a treat on visors so should work just as good on glasses.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/2811...rlsatarget=pla-258198432223&adtype=pla&crdt=0
anti mist.JPG
 

Accy cyclist

Legendary Member
I sometimes wear my glasses when cycling (i have drop handlebars). If i didn't wear one of those wrap round the head stretchy bands on my glasses they would constantly slip down due to the lens thickness/weight, with me being poor sighted. So my sight would be affected, especially if i was riding on the bottom of the bars. The sales assistant has a point i'd say.
 
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lutonloony

Über Member
Location
torbay
I do admit to having an issue with glasses sliding down my nose and ending up looking over the top of them (and yes it can cause a stiff neck) but it happens on all bar types. It even happens when sitting eating dinner.

No pair of glasses I've ever had has fitted me properly no matter how much the optician (different ones used over the years) adjusts them so I must have an odd-shaped head. I guess I need somewhere to store my huge brain!
I'm impressed that you can eat your dinner while cycling
 
Instead of assuming he's a dim-witted imbecile, with nothing to go on but 1 interaction. Maybe it would be fair to suggest he is misinformed rather than uneducated.

Or perhaps had personal experience with poor fitting glasses, or a poor bike.
 
I've just been wandering around a high street cycle shop wondering whether to get a proper road bike to replace my MTB when I was approached by a sales assistant. I explained what I was looking for and he told me he would recommend I stay away from bikes with drop handlebars and go for a straight bar hybrid type bike. I asked why he though this and he told me, "because you wear glasses."

Is this and issue? Has anyone had difficulty seeing the road in front of them because they are looking over their glasses and not through them?

I think most sales assistants want to look as if they are "experts in the field".
True,they should have good knowledge about the products(some don't),but to give you advice on something entirely different is just trying to look clever.
 
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