A bike fit is about extracting money from customers.
Did you have a bad one?
For me it was certainly not money wasted.
A bike fit is about extracting money from customers.
Which bike fit is scientifically correct, seeing as most of the major systems contradict their rivals often in some quite fundamental ways? It's the cycling equivalent of homeopathy.
Interesting, what is your bike? make and model please?
Of course some homeopathy works, you just have to find the right one.
A bike fit is about extracting money from customers.
Which bikefit system then?
Depends on how many hours you intend riding in one day.
A bike thjats comfortable and efficient for 30 miles may be an instrument of torture after 130 miles not allways though. choice of a road bike is a very individual thing where there are many more factors than just your body measurements.
Bike shops should take more responsibility IMHO .Loads of people out there riding poorly fitted bikes .Usual thing seems to be bikes too small and racing geometrty for pootling round country lanes etc.In a proper bike fit your flexibility should be measured as well as body one's.
Bike shops should take more responsibility IMHO .Loads of people out there riding poorly fitted bikes .Usual thing seems to be bikes too small and racing geometrty for pootling round country lanes etc.
But that is what some like me want, there are so many different aspects of cycling, the manufacturer gives us choices.
I do agree though a lot of shops can give poor service, and a lot of companies selling bikes never even see their customers.
There's nothing new or magical about 'sportive' bikes, it's just a question of buying a bike you can achieve a good fit with and is suitable for the type of riding you want to use it for. And no it isn't just all about geometry, it's also about frame material, wheels, tyres, bars, stem, saddle, crank length and not least how you set it all up.When I first began riding drop bars, had this funny feeling that it was not all that right, at least for me...
Not sure how the sportive came about...
And its all in the geometry.
I think often it is not the bike but the body that is the problem. A lot of people are too inflexible and have no stretching regimes.
There's nothing new or magical about 'sportive' bikes, it's just a question of buying a bike you can achieve a good fit with and is suitable for the type of riding you want to use it for. And no it isn't just all about geometry, it's also about frame material, wheels, tyres, bars, stem, saddle, crank length and not least how you set it all up.