T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1406.1 | THEY'RE WHERE YOU FIND 'EM | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:19 | 14 |
| I would suggest that these are isolated "specific to individual"
cases. As long as cycling has been around and as popular as it's
become over the past 10 years, this would have been heavily pub-
licized. Many of the world's top riders (or their wives) would have
had difficulty with family establishment.
By no means am I knocking the Milwaukee Sentinel. I just think that
"studies" are often not worth the paper they shared on (even as
cheap as news paper is).
I guess erections are where you find them. The other thing that
baffles me is that 209 kil.'s isn't all that demanding as long as
you're fitted properly to the equipment. Hey, maybe a bicycle with
a rumble seat or running board??? :-)
|
1406.2 | grain of salt | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:50 | 6 |
|
I echo Chip's sentiment. Especially since even a 209km *one* day
race wouldn't be out of the ordinary for lots of "potent" cyclists.
This really sounds like a special case.
-john
|
1406.3 | _Bicycling_ magazine, take note! | DEBUG::SCHULDT | I'm Occupant! | Wed Jan 10 1990 14:24 | 2 |
| It's hard to reconcile this item with the article in Bicycling magazine
a couple months back....
|
1406.4 | Maybe it's what your sitting on! | TRCO01::OSTROWSKI | All cycled up | Wed Jan 10 1990 15:13 | 10 |
| I have never had a problem riding my own bike, but have had the
feeling of an electrical current going through my manhood for up
to an hour after riding the Lifecycle. I think a lot of this has
to do with the type of seat on the Lifecycle which is much wider
than the normal racing style of seat!
Goodbye and thanks for all the Fish !
Gerry O
|
1406.5 | 1 solution: recumbents! | KOOZEE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Thu Jan 11 1990 11:35 | 4 |
| If the article were valid, it might be another reason to push for
recumbents... But, as mentioned, it's specific to individuals, and
possibly only to those with mis-adjusted seats.
- riding in comfort, Chris
|
1406.6 | There's a lesson here ... | TOOK::R_WOODBURY | don't you know, I'm a 2000 man? | Thu Jan 11 1990 13:13 | 11 |
|
>>> the explanation offered is that the position of the body
>>> on the hard bicycle seat for a long period of time compressed the
>>> penis , diminishing the blood flow to the nerves and causing a loss
>>> of function.
I guess the lesson here is to never sit on a penis while riding a
bicycle (at least not for "long periods of time").
-RW
|
1406.7 | GOOD ANSWER... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Fri Jan 12 1990 11:45 | 6 |
| Re; .6 response: I love it! I wouldn't want to sit on mine or anyone's
on or off a bike, for that matter!! :-)
Critical lesson...
The random Chip
|
1406.8 | Hey Chip | WECARE::PAMMER | | Wed Jan 17 1990 07:51 | 10 |
| Good one Chipper!
If the guy was sitting on his penis, one might ask if there was
something wrong BEFORE the race. For all we know, his girlfriend
may be a Dairy-Queen. There's the reason for everything!
I've learned a hard lessen here was well!....
enjoying rides (on AND off the bike),
Jim
|
1406.9 | definitely the saddle | ORCHRD::GARABEDIAN | | Thu Jan 18 1990 07:50 | 6 |
|
It is definitely the saddle. I have had some numbness (didnt matter
how many miles) and it is definitely the saddle. Looks like a case
of a newspaper/reporter not doing the homework.
Harry
|
1406.10 | Cosmo tells all | WAV12::DELORIEA | Work starts Jan 8th | Thu Jan 18 1990 10:30 | 13 |
| All jokes aside, I think this does happen although not to the extent mentioned
in .0. During my one and only century ride of the year last year I had some
numbness in the aforementioned area. No I wasn't sitting on my unit. I noticed
when I had a call of nature. It answered my sitting vs standing on the hills
question. Sitting in the same position for a long period of time will shut off
feeling and or blood supply to your leg, butt or crotch. Even if your sitting on
your favorite easy chair you'll find yourself changing your position every once
and a while. I first heard about a story similar to .0 in a motorcycling mag.
It was the guys butt that lost feeling for months from a cross country ride on
his motorcycle. I'm sure a recumbent rider will have to admit that his behind
will get sore/numb after a couple of hours straight in the saddle.
Tom
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1406.11 | distributed pressure = comfort! | ENGINE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Thu Jan 18 1990 11:44 | 9 |
| re. last 'recumbent riders...' NOT SO!! I have a tender tail -
that's why I ride a recumbent. I have never had a sore tail for any
ride up to centuries. (Exception: when the webbing in the seat sagged
and I was partially supported by the 'top tube' which runs under the
seat - that did get sore, real quick.) There is enough flex in the
buttocks due to pedaling motion, and enough support by the seat, so
that a proper recumbent seat (I've seen some with hard plastic seats:
No Thanks!) can be sat in for 8 or 9 hours without tail soreness. Your
legs will be wiped out with fatigue, but your tail will be OK. - Chris
|
1406.12 | 50+ C's in '89, dozen or so doubs. | BANZAI::FISHER | Pat Pending | Thu Jan 18 1990 15:46 | 8 |
| I never had a century or longer [or shorter] ride cause the problem
cited. There must be something more to it than length of the time in
the saddle.
Perhaps after 600 or so consecutive miles I didn't care whether or not
things were functioning, but they were ok.
ed
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1406.13 | size not time | MASTER::MBELISLE | DTN 292-2140 | Fri Jan 19 1990 11:06 | 9 |
|
Hey, your right ed, there is something more to it then length
of the time in the saddle...
Let's just leave it to the imagination. 8#)
Mike
|