T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1091.1 | FIT - FIT - FIT | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Fri Apr 07 1989 08:28 | 23 |
| You already know the answer. If a combination of stem length and
seat adjustment don't make it the only other alternative is a
correct frame. Mixtes are a no-no. I haven't read one positive
thing about them anywhere. They're sloppy, low quality, made of
pig iron and are a generally weaker frame. The reasons, the major
manufacturers recognize the fact that the design stinks and no
one would use one in competition. In the "olden" days when women
wore skirts they served a purpose, now they continue to be made
for the same reason that England still has a king and queen (I
guess - I can't think of any other reason).
There are a great many szes and configurations of stems and seat
post set-ups (also pedal/cleat/cage adjustments). I would go to
a GOOD shop and explain the situation. Bring the bike and the wife.
The soreness could be a number things, but my guess is poor position
due to poor fit. Especially the neck. Elbows might be cured by gloves
(road shock) but are probably fit caused as well.
Don't break open the piggy bank yet. You may get out of it cheaper
than you think. GOOD LUCK.
Chip
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1091.2 | Help her work out the kinks 8^) | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Apr 07 1989 09:23 | 4 |
| If soreness still develops after a "proper fit" massage works many
wonders. :-)
ed
|
1091.3 | MORE ON WOMENS FIT | AKOV11::FULLER | | Fri Apr 07 1989 09:27 | 19 |
| To give you a variance in frame geometries, my wife's bike when
I met her was a 19 1/2" frame with about 21 1/2" top tube. The
shortened the stem to 60mm but it was still too much stretch.
She now rides a 19 1/2" frame with a 19 3/4" top tube and a 70mm
stem.
Besides going to shops, go to some club rides and get to know other
riders and try her on some other bikes.
Women riders: Don't just go to a bike shop and ask for a women's
bike. Because something is marketed as such, it may not be any
different than a man's bike. Many taller women I know fit better
on a men's frame with a short top tube. TOP TUBES LENGTH VARIES
BETWEEN MANUFACTURERS. Get the proper fit via assistance
of a knowledgable person and/or fit kit, then find a bike that matches.
Ask the shop to change the saddle to womens and if need be, shorten
the stem.
steve
|
1091.4 | It really does hurt! | BCSE::OROURKE | | Fri Apr 07 1989 11:26 | 33 |
|
I can relate directly to your wife's problem; I had the same one. I
went through the whole "fit business" and got a nice bike.
(I'm 5'8", with a 34" inseam.)
I enjoyed riding except for the pain in my shoulder and neck. I
just resolved myself to it, and the few times I went out, I just took
along some Advil.
When I bought my fiance a new bike this year, I rode it a few times,
and discovered that there was no pain at all. I got him a Miyata
Triple cross (see earlier note) and there was no discomfort at all.
The Triple cross is discribed as
"...Finally somebody put ...ATB comfort into a lightweight bike.
The heavy-dudy cranks, midweight tires and lightweight frame
are going to redefine cycling enjoyment. Throught it all, you'll
be sitting pretty with your control panel of thumb shifters and
and brake levers on a compact 52cm highbar."
It's a cross between ATB and touring bike, put the point is that the
handle bars are up very high, and I can ride all day with no discomfort
at all. The frame is the exact size of my old racing-style bike, but
the handlebars seemed to make the difference.
Several of my women friends have also tried the bike, with the same
reaction. Perhaps you can put that style handlebars on her bike.
Kelly
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1091.5 | MT bike bars on a sport touring bike. | MCIS2::DELORIEA | Common sense isn't | Fri Apr 07 1989 12:20 | 20 |
| > I got him a Miyata Triple cross (see earlier note) and there was no
> discomfort at all. The Triple cross is discribed as
> "...Finally somebody put ...ATB comfort into a lightweight bike.
> The heavy-dudy cranks, midweight tires and lightweight frame
> are going to redefine cycling enjoyment. Throught it all, you'll
> be sitting pretty with your control panel of thumb shifters and
> and brake levers on a compact 52cm highbar."
> It's a cross between ATB and touring bike, put the point is that the
> handle bars are up very high, and I can ride all day with no discomfort
> at all. The frame is the exact size of my old racing-style bike, but
> the handlebars seemed to make the difference.
I bought a Bianchi Advantage which is the same style as the above with
700x3? wheels (I think there on sale now for $319)
She loves it!!!
|
1091.6 | Some bandaids... | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Fri Apr 07 1989 13:28 | 11 |
| Besides going to a frame with a shorter top tube, like a Terry,
temporary relief can be attained by bringing the bars back and UP
to get away from the stretched out, painful, position.
There are stems with much longer necks called swan stems or
goosenecks that will raise the bars a couple of inches and have
almost no extension (forward displacement of bars). These, used
in conjunction with the randanaur (sp?) style bars which come out
from the stem and RISE before curving into the drops, can help.
These alter the steering geometry of the bike and are bandaids compared
to a properly designed short top tube bike like Georgena's beauties.
- a Terry fan, Chris
|
1091.7 | Uh what's up doc? | ICBB::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Fri Apr 07 1989 13:39 | 15 |
| What is she wearing on her head? After several seasons
of wearing a heavy touring style helmet (Bell Tourlite ?) I
suffered thru intense pain at the base of the back of my
neck and shoulders. Last season my wife bought me a Bell
Ovation, one of the new light weight foam models and the
pain has virtually disappeared on short rides and is only
somewhat mild on the longer ones. The point is that if your
neck muscles are acustomed to carrying a lot of weight its
going to take some time to get accustomed to it and all the
frame fitting adjustments aren't going to help that problem.
It worked for me and might be just what she needs to try before
investing in a new bike.
Jerry
|
1091.8 | Time for ANOTHER body/frame size survey ? | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Fri Apr 07 1989 14:14 | 56 |
|
Try this:-
A = Pubis bone to floor (standing erect, barefoot)
B = Shoulder (Acromion (sp ?) the outer edge of the upper
arm bone) to wrist fold.
C = Pubis bone to upper edge of sternum (clavicle is NOT a
musical instrument)
NOTE: If you can't find these places on your body get help
from someone (a friend ?) who can, read your owner's manual, see
Gray's anatomy, a first aid CPR book, or just forget it.
A Seat Tube B+C Top tube
80 51 100 53
81 51.7 101 53.4
82 52.4 102 53.8
83 53.1 103 54.1
84 53.7 104 54.4
85 54.3 105 54.7
86 54.9 106 55
87 55.5 107 55.3
88 56.1 108 55.6
89 56.7 109 55.9
90 57.5 110 56.2
91 57.9 111 56.5
92 58.5 112 56.8
93 59 113 57.1
94 59.5 114 57.4
95 60 115 57.7
96 60.5 116 58
97 60.9 117 58.3
98 61.3 118 58.6
99 61.7 119 58.8
100 62.1 120 59
121 59.2
122 59.4
123 59.6
124 59.8
125 60
Yes Veronica, all measurements ARE in centimeters. If you
only have an inches tape measure either buy a metric tape or multiply
your inch measurements by 2.54 (approx).
Have a fun week-end measuring each other/getting measured BY
each other - and remember, its B + C that matters more than A !
R
Oh, extrapolate/interpolate as required - and don't believe that TOO
much precision is required.
|
1091.9 | Give them a centimeter, they take a meter! | DELNI::GRACE | life is unpredictable; eat dessert first | Fri Apr 07 1989 18:33 | 2 |
| Ain't he the Dickens?!
|
1091.10 | Top Tube Delimiters? | MEO78B::SHERRATT | | Thu Apr 13 1989 04:00 | 17 |
| Thanks for all the info, folks. It's certainly given us a few things
to try. Now if only the rain would stop.
Her helmet is a Scott Aspen Atom which weighs in at 440 gm. I thought
that this was reasonably light, after all, I'm still using a Bell
TourLite. After looking at a few helmet ads in the local magazines,
I guess that's not the case.
One point: from where to where is the top tube measurement? From
centre line on the seat tube to centre line on the head? tube?
By the way, they (somebody) changed the definition of an inch.
Under the old definition the conversion factor between inches and
centimetres was approx 2.54. An inch is now defined as 25.4
millimetres. Add that to your trivia bank.
Richard
|
1091.11 | | AKOV11::COHEN | Andrew B. Cohen | Thu Apr 13 1989 04:07 | 9 |
|
< Her helmet is a Scott Aspen Atom which weighs in at 440 gm. I thought
very heavy by today's standards.
< One point: from where to where is the top tube measurement? From
< centre line on the seat tube to centre line on the head? tube?
Yes
|
1091.12 | Huh ? {Only a dweeb would measure centre to top} | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Thu Apr 13 1989 10:48 | 12 |
| re < Note 1091.10 by MEO78B::SHERRATT >
> -< Top Tube Delimiters? >-
> One point: from where to where is the top tube measurement? From
> centre line on the seat tube to centre line on the head? tube?
All engineering dimensions are normally centre to centre. I
don't understand where you are getting confused, there is only one
centre line at the head tube, its concentric with the stem.
R
|
1091.13 | Firsthand female perspective | ICBB::GAWRONSKI | Pedaling is my way | Thu Apr 13 1989 11:56 | 34 |
|
This is from the female perspective. I'm 5'2" tall with a
27" inseam. I put over 3,000 on a 19" Univega and every ride
ended with stiff and painful shoulders, sore neck and stiff arms.
It didn't dampen my enthusiasm for cycling but I didn't think
anything that was so much fun should be so uncomfortable and
painful! I originally thought it was just due to "tenseness" while
riding until I observed other riders who were able to vary positions
while riding (especially their arms) and seemed so much more flexible.
At the end of the '87 season I purchased a Terry Despatch. Yes,
it is one of those funny looking bikes with the 24" front wheel.
Since I've been riding my Terry I haven't had a sore neck, stiff arms
or shoulder pain.
The overall smaller sizing of the Terry "fit" me better but
the big difference for me was in top tube length and distance from
top tube to ground.
Terry Univega
top tube 19.3" (49cm) 20.5" (52cm)
ground to top tube 28.7" (73cm) 30" (76cm)
As previous notes have stated, proper fit is crucial so don't
compromise on the fit.
Laura
|
1091.14 | whats in an inch | CNTROL::GANDARA | | Thu Apr 13 1989 13:05 | 12 |
|
re .10
> By the way, they (somebody) changed the definition of an inch.
> Under the old definition the conversion factor between inches and
> centimetres was approx 2.54. An inch is now defined as 25.4
> millimetres. Add that to your trivia bank.
Im confused, these conversion factors seem consistant to me...
Rob
|
1091.15 | Jerry on Terry | ICBB::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Thu Apr 13 1989 13:52 | 9 |
| re.13
Can a man ride a bike with a woman's frame ? Why don't
they make Terry's for men with legs as long as womens? They
could call them Jerry's :-) That way us guys with long legs
in proportion to our torso length could be more comfortable
too. Let me know what Georgina thinks of this.
Jerry
|
1091.16 | She can fix you, too. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Apr 13 1989 14:37 | 5 |
| I have seen many men on Terrys.
Most of them were nowhere near 6 ft tall though.
ed
|
1091.17 | No more confusion | MEO78B::SHERRATT | | Fri Apr 14 1989 03:24 | 10 |
| Re .12
> All engineering dimensions are normally centre to centre. I
> don't understand where you are getting confused, there is only one
> centre line at the head tube, its concentric with the stem.
Understood. But you could measure the tube itself, inside to inside.
After all, all engineering disciplines have their eccentricities.
Richard
|
1091.18 | less than there was before | MEO78B::SHERRATT | | Fri Apr 14 1989 03:36 | 22 |
| re .14
> re .10
> By the way, they (somebody) changed the definition of an inch.
> Under the old definition the conversion factor between inches and
> centimetres was approx 2.54. An inch is now defined as 25.4
> millimetres. Add that to your trivia bank.
> Im confused, these conversion factors seem consistant to me...
Under the previous definition an inch was defined along the lines
of "1/12 of the length of King Henry VIII left FOOT" or some such
nonsense like that. I can't remember the exact definition. It
just happened to be *almost* exactly 2.54 centimetres. The new
definition makes is *exactly* equal to 25.4 millimetres. No "almost".
As I said, trivia.
Richard
|
1091.19 | Dead horse still kicking | BUFFO::BUFFO | David Buffo | Fri Apr 14 1989 11:41 | 8 |
| I'm still confused. In school I learned that 1 cm is exactly 10mm,
by definition. So how can something be exactly 25.4mm and almost 2.54cm?
Kind of like "exactly 100 cents and almost a dollar." (I'm speaking
of US currency here. If I didn't say this, someone would say "But
the Galumphic dollar has 34 cents, because that's how many fingers
King Poo-Bah of Galumphic has.")
Anyone else care to beat this horse?
|
1091.20 | I can't believe I'm wasting my time, but . . . | LEVERS::LANDRY | | Fri Apr 14 1989 13:47 | 9 |
|
Used to be that inches and centimeters were defined on completely
different bases. Back then, an inch was ALMOST equal to 2.54
centimeters (or 25.4 mm). Some years ago some International
Bureau of People Who Worry About Such Things redefined the inch
to be EXACTLY equal to 2.54cm (or 25.4 mm).
chris
|
1091.21 | Well that certainly clears it up ! | AKOV68::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Fri Apr 14 1989 16:45 | 3 |
|
(8-( !
|
1091.22 | Feeling Better and Enjoying It | MEO78B::SHERRATT | | Tue May 02 1989 04:58 | 10 |
| Thanks for all the help. The bike was basically badly set up.
After raising the seat post to the correct height and moving the
saddle forward, the set up is just OK. That probably means I'll
be buying her a Terry, or clone, if she decides that she likes the
sport.
We have been out for the last few weekends and the pain has gone.
The padded gloves and the light weight helmet probably helped too.
Richard.
|
1091.23 | Another Terry owner | EQUINE::DANI | | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:10 | 18 |
|
I bought a Terry a little over a year ago. Since then I have about 5,000 miles
on it. I bought the Precision model and absolutely love it! Mine has two
regular sized wheels as the 20 inch frame fit me well. Even then the handle
bar stem in very short. (I'm 5'6")
A just bought my second Terry this week. :-) I'd been looking for a mountain
bike but was have a tremendous time with length in the top tube, so I decided
to try and locate a Mt Marcy - Goergena's mountain bike. The first time a took
it out I whipped out, but had a great time.
I located this bike at Bicycle Alley in Worcester. It was worth the drive from
southern N.H. as I had to call Georgena to locate 18 inch frame size. THe
reason I mention Bicycle Alley, is that I feel I got a great deal on his bike
and I noticed a bunch of other Terry's there. I also think they are running a
sale in the next week. Might be a good time to call and check it out.
Danielle
|