MacB
Lover of things that come in 3's
- Location
- Farnborough, Hampshire
Seeking yet more advice from you knowledgeable folks, some of you may have noticed my previous thread on butterfly bars. So I have these but the clamp diameter is 25.4mm and my new bike has an 'oversized' stem with a clamp diameter of 31.8mm. I know I can get a new stem, and will, but, now that I have the butterfly bars, I have been mulling over fitting and hand positions. With my current levers and shifters then I can only see a fit on the open part of the bars in the closer position. This effectively means that there's only one position at which I can brake and change gears and it would be practically the same as my current flat bar set up. I've also found a big improvement with the flat bars on the new bike as they have 'ergon' style grips which give somewhere to rest the heel of the hand. I've been researching even further and have narrowed down some further contenders, so we have:-
original butterfly bars - offer good variety of hand position but concerned at the limited choice for levers etc. Paul on this site kindly provided me with photos of how he had his set up to help me.
H-Bars - these are based on the, far more expensive titanium bars, designed by Jeff Jones
http://cyclesense.co.uk/products.ph..._660_mm_HANDLEBARS_AND_STEMS_Handlebars_-_MTB
http://www.jonesbikes.com/
idea being that the levers and shifters go on the shorter of the 'bar end' areas and are thus accessible from 3 hand positions(the most I've been able to find for any type of bar). As originally designed for MTBing I was wondering if these would be more robust than touring bars, I've read some claims of overt flexiness re the latter.
Touring style bars in general, most noteably the Nitto Moustache bar(I note that Chris on here has these fitted to his Dawes) - these seem pretty similar in hand positions to the H-Bar but I have only seem images of them with drop style levers/shifters so not sure how suitable they'd be for a straight conversion from a flat bar.
Flat bars - keep existing but upgrade the grips to the Ergon ones with the built in bar ends and adjustable angles - again these really only offer the one position for shifting and braking.
http://www.wiggle.co.uk/p/Cycle/7/Ergon_GC3_Grips/5360037503/
I understand that I would need to change stems to match clamping diameter but would I have any problems with tubing diameter re moving shifters and levers? I'm happy with using packing/shims to make up diameter for these but would be unhappy to find mine were too small. The current bars are the Giant A5 Aluminium Riser that came with the bike.
Appreciate any input, suggestions and advice....thanks.....Al
original butterfly bars - offer good variety of hand position but concerned at the limited choice for levers etc. Paul on this site kindly provided me with photos of how he had his set up to help me.
H-Bars - these are based on the, far more expensive titanium bars, designed by Jeff Jones
http://cyclesense.co.uk/products.ph..._660_mm_HANDLEBARS_AND_STEMS_Handlebars_-_MTB
http://www.jonesbikes.com/
idea being that the levers and shifters go on the shorter of the 'bar end' areas and are thus accessible from 3 hand positions(the most I've been able to find for any type of bar). As originally designed for MTBing I was wondering if these would be more robust than touring bars, I've read some claims of overt flexiness re the latter.
Touring style bars in general, most noteably the Nitto Moustache bar(I note that Chris on here has these fitted to his Dawes) - these seem pretty similar in hand positions to the H-Bar but I have only seem images of them with drop style levers/shifters so not sure how suitable they'd be for a straight conversion from a flat bar.
Flat bars - keep existing but upgrade the grips to the Ergon ones with the built in bar ends and adjustable angles - again these really only offer the one position for shifting and braking.
http://www.wiggle.co.uk/p/Cycle/7/Ergon_GC3_Grips/5360037503/
I understand that I would need to change stems to match clamping diameter but would I have any problems with tubing diameter re moving shifters and levers? I'm happy with using packing/shims to make up diameter for these but would be unhappy to find mine were too small. The current bars are the Giant A5 Aluminium Riser that came with the bike.
Appreciate any input, suggestions and advice....thanks.....Al