T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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129.1 | Gloves !! | SUPER::CONNELL | | Mon Aug 11 1986 15:31 | 11 |
|
Long hours on a bike can result in nerve damage to the hands. Over
the long run, it can be serious. I'm sure your's will get better
but you should guard against it happening.
Did you use cycling gloves? I find that the standard glove does
not give me enough protection. I use Spenco gloves (extra gushy
padding). Foam cushioning on the bars is another approach.
Chuck
|
129.2 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | | Mon Aug 11 1986 18:03 | 14 |
|
Sounds like it might be a positioning problem as well, ie. the stem's
too short, and there's too much weight on your hands. Better gloves
may just mask this. When fitted properly, your hands should just
lay on the bars with little weight on the wrist. The stem length
is what determines your fore-aft center of gravity. You should be
able to ride with your hands on the brake hoods, let go while in
that position, and not fall forward or strain your back excessively.
Proper fit first, then the best gloves you can afford.
CdH
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129.3 | *ELBOW* brand shock absorbers; better than Spenco, and cheaper | EUREKA::REG_B | Bicycle break-dancer | Tue Aug 12 1986 12:38 | 9 |
|
Also worth checking your "style" on the bike. A lot of folks
seem to go the shock absorbing material route when a slight bend
in the elbow will do the trick. Your shoulder pain seems to suggest
that you may be riding in the locked elbow position, which is hard
on most of the upper body.
Reg
|
129.4 | AMBIDEXTROUS HELPS | APPLE::JSMITH | | Tue Aug 12 1986 14:32 | 8 |
| I have been using a pair of SECA gloves, mostly because the backs
are made of a Terrycloth Type material that is great for removing
facial perspiration. I also noticed riding home the other night
that I tend to always reach for my water bottle with my right hand
which put a great strain on my left, this could be causing part
of the problem. I'll start using both hands equally and see if
this helps. As far as the stem is concerned, what should one look
for as a good fit indicator? Thanks for your tips so far!
|
129.5 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | | Tue Aug 12 1986 16:05 | 11 |
|
There really are no hard and fast rules for stem fitting. The best
way is to have someone who knows how to fit you take a look at your
position while riding or on the turbotrainer. That's how we do it.
I'd be willing to fit you if we could arrange a convenient place
(how about at a club ride?).
CdH
|
129.6 | CLUB RIDES | APPLE::JSMITH | | Wed Aug 13 1986 13:16 | 7 |
| A club ride would be great, but I thought that most of the rides
are south of Merrimack...Is the schedule published in notes. I
didn't see one mentioned in the directory....if theres a mailing
list I'd like to get on it. I just started riding with the Granite
State Wheelmen this past week. Theres a metric Century in Methuen
this Saturday that I'm going to try. Hopefully I'll meet alot of
Digital Bikers at that one.
|
129.7 | | BANZAI::FISHER | | Thu Aug 14 1986 07:11 | 11 |
| I thought there was an Aug newsletter, but could not find it. 97.6 has
the DECbikeclub ride schedule for the remainder of the summer.
We (the GSW) did not get the Methuen metric advertised for the DECbikers
so they did not know about it until now.
Glad to hear that you are sufficiently recovered from Saturday to go at
another good ride. If all goes well, I'll be up in the Mtns doing the
4 notches and a Pass, again.
ed
|
129.8 | Still Hurts | APPLE::JSMITH | | Mon Aug 18 1986 09:06 | 10 |
| Well I did the Methuen Metric. It was poorly attended, only about
8 people showed up. Due to poor navigating and no one to ride with
I ended up in Haverhill instead of Methuen. It was more like a regular
Century. I tried the suggestion
on the bent elbow and was very concious not to ride stiff arm.
This seemed to help my shoulder/neck pain a bit but didn't do anything
for my fingers. After the ride I couldn't open the car door with
my left hand. I think I'm going to have to spring for the $25 Spenco
Gloves. Thanks for all the advice and encouragement. Bikers are
a neat group of people.
|
129.9 | | 7180::WILSON | Short timer | Wed Aug 20 1986 16:32 | 19 |
| The numbness/pain is caused by an irritation of the Ulnar nerve.
This runs down the Ulnar bone (hense the name) on the little finger
side of the arm. It then crosses out into the palm and splits to
the fingers. The irritation screws up everything distal (away from)
that point.
As 129.1 mentioned pernament damage can result over prolonged occurance.
If the pain/numbness does not abate after rest, have a doctor check
it out. Nerve damage is most often pernament so prevention is all
the more important.
There is a pamplet in Spenco products which outlines this (and how
THEIR product can help [ie plug]).
I used to get it occasionally, put foam pads (Spenco, I like the
brand) on the handlebars and have no problems anymore.
Steve W.
|
129.10 | Here's my 2 cents worth | NATASH::WAGNER | | Wed Aug 20 1986 19:05 | 15 |
| Another thing to watch which can make a real difference here is
making certain that you keep your elbows in. The natural tendency
is to turn your arm in such a way that your slightly bent elbows
are pointing out (i.e., in looking down at your arm, it does not
describe a straight line). You should concentrate on keeping your
elbows in. By in I mean that your arm should bend down, but not
out (or in for that matter). This can be an unnatural feeling position
for your arm when you first use it, however it will reduce the
pressure on the nerves in your wrist and hand.
This can be an especially important consideration for women, I've
been told, because their arms swing in a different arc than mens.
Jim
|
129.11 | | SUPER::CONNELL | | Thu Aug 21 1986 10:30 | 11 |
|
If you have such a problem that you had trouble opening the car
door, then I say YOU SHOULD DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS NOW.
I have been riding for years, and have gotten sore hands, but never
so I couldn't move them. You are on the edge of bad damage, I think.
(Hope this doesn't sound to stern.)
Chuck
|
129.12 | | APPLE::JSMITH | | Fri Aug 22 1986 21:58 | 10 |
| After carefully analyzing my riding posture I find it physically
impossible for me to hold the bar with bent elbows while keeping my arms
straight because to do so causes my knees to hit my forearms. I
think that the only way I could assume this position comfortably
would be to purchase a real wide handle bar, or use a mountain bike.
I can get into this position by riding on the brake hoods (which
is what I normally do anyway) but this wouldn't allow me to change
positions frequently which would probably make the problem worse.
Chuck probaly has a good point....I'm going to break down and get
the SPENCO fast.
|
129.13 | SPENCO'S THE ANSWER | APPLE::JSMITH | | Tue Sep 09 1986 08:47 | 9 |
| Well I broke down and bought the SPENCO gloves just prior to the
Flattest Century in the East this past weekend and it looks as if
this problem is solved. I still have a slight tingle in my pinky
but I think its getting better. I'd highly recommend the SPENCO
gloves to anyone that doesn't have them even if they don't have
the problem, that way hopefully they never will. This Century was
also much more comfortable than the last on my neck and shoulders
thanks to all the tips on riding posture. Thanks to all of you
who contributed to my plee for help.
|
129.14 | poking at an old topic | SYSENG::BITTLE | Nancy Bittle-hardware engineer; LSE | Mon Sep 18 1989 18:24 | 27 |
|
Yesterday I completed the 33 mile "Women on a Roll" tour through
Lincoln, Concord, and Sudbury. Great tour, good turnout (maybe
200+ ), police holding up traffic for us at some busy intersections,
etc..
This was the first time I'd done any riding at *all* since before
college (graduated 2 years ago). I thought I'd be very sore in
my legs, but I guess basketball and swimming are good for something!
The only after-effect that's bothering is a twitch in the first
3 fingers of my left hand. I recall this hand falling asleep once
during the tour.
Before I thought that the foam grips on my Miyata ATB were
comfortable enough and that gloves were superflous.
However, after reading all the replies to this topic, it seems that
gloves could prevent further numbness and day-after twitching in
my hands... (I do plan to continue riding - it was loads of fun!)
I've heard that mountain bike gloves are different than racing
gloves... Is this true? Is there a certain brand of ATB glove
you would recommend?
Thanks in advance.
nancy b.
|
129.15 | Get Spenco if you can afford them | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Sat Sep 23 1989 21:01 | 18 |
| Hi Nancy,
Three years later (almost to the day) and I'm still wearing
Spenco and haven't had a recurrence of the numbness problem and
I've done rides over twice the distances I was writing about back
then. I don't think that a special mountain bike glove is going
to give you any more performance than a regular glove since its
the shock absorbing material (Spenco Gel) in the plam that makes
the difference. I personally won't wear anything else since Spenco
works for me, but if you think that $20 to $25 a pr. is to steep
then you might want to try one of the new Gel Filled gloves like
Nashbars for $17 and I think Performance has an inexpensive one
also. Hope they work for you.
_Jerry
BTW: The new Nashbar glove almost looks more like a mountain
bike glove than conventional gloves since they cover almost
your entire hand.
|
129.16 | | GUCCI::MHILL | Carpe Diem - ride, ride, ride! | Mon Sep 25 1989 13:54 | 11 |
| Nancy:
For what it's worth. I ride both an ATB and touring bike. When
I ride my ATB for more than an hour or so on the road, my hands
tend to go numb unless I shake out the kinks every so often. This
is more a result of the lack of hand positions available with ATB
style bars vs drops. I don't have the problem with my C-dale, even
if I stay in the saddle all day.
BTW: I wear the same pair of gloves on both bikes.
|
129.17 | gel gloves appear to be a solution | SYSENG::BITTLE | Nancy Bittle - hardware engineer; LSE | Mon Oct 02 1989 01:10 | 26 |
| re: .15 (Jerry Smith)
Thanks for the advice! I ended out ordering a pair of Nashbar
Gel gloves for $17 after seeing the Spenco Gel gloves in Ray &
Sons bike shop in Maynard for _$28_ (is that place a rip-off or
are Spenco's normally that price?). The smooth lycra on the back
of the Nashbar gloves are much more comfortable to me than the
scratchy mesh stuff on the Spenco gloves; on the other hand, they
might not wear as well.
Took them on a 1.5 hour ride in today's glorious fall weather
with no numbness during the ride whatsoever!
re: .16 (Marty Hill)
> When I ride my ATB for more than an hour or so on the
> road, my hands tend to go numb unless I shake out the
> kinks every so often. This is more a result of the lack
> of hand positions available with ATB style bars vs drops.
I kept what you said in mind when I rode today and moved my hands
around more on the grips, and didn't grip as tightly as I
remember doing the first time out with the bike....no tingles or
twitches 12 hours later - thanks.
nancy b.
|
129.18 | Nashbar Gloves?? | GUCCI::MHILL | Carpe Diem - ride, ride, ride! | Tue Oct 03 1989 15:11 | 9 |
| Nancy:
Let me know how you like the Nashbar Gel gloves. I have a pair
(blue) and after many hours on the bike, they still turn my hands
blue form perspiration.
R,
Marty
|