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bar ends on a riser
 

[Closed] bar ends on a riser

 try5
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[#656687]

I've put bar ends on my riser bars on my commuter.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:05 pm
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what's your point, caller?


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:06 pm
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i have them on both my mtb bikes they are my bikes I will place my hands where I like thanks
EDIT: and they are both ergo grips


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:06 pm
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Me too on my ss comuter!

But not on a proper MTB No sir!


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:07 pm
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got the ergo ones on my risers


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:09 pm
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Nowt wrong with bar ends on any bars


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:12 pm
 try5
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what, never on a proper mtb.
what about if you had to do an event with lots and lots of climbing?


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:15 pm
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Hmm still think not! I do lots of climbing on my proper MTB any way. Dont like the idea of sticky up things on a bike I like to chuck about! And it just doesnt seem right some how, So no actually never! Managed the Dyfi and Puffer last year with out them.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:20 pm
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bar ends on risers? certainly not. would make my rig look less like an engineless motocross bike ๐Ÿ™„


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:31 pm
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Got them on mine, ergo grips as well.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:33 pm
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Always. On my enduro AND my commuter. Why? Because its more comfortable and winds the fashion police up on here!


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:35 pm
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I put some knobblies on my MTB commuter the other day just for a change and took it on a 20-odd mile off-road route, flat bars and bar ends, I'd forgotten just how useful those bar ends are when you've got a 20 minute grinding climb!

๐Ÿ˜ฏ


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:41 pm
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They're great if you've got a bit of arm pump from a descent as well.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 8:43 pm
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I am experimenting with Cane Creek ergos on this:

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The bar is a [u]flat[/u] Truvativ Stylo, 700mm wide with a 10 degree back-sweep. I think the bar is actually too wide for the bar-end position to be beneficial, and the sweep of the bar means that the bar ends point out too far. My preferred climbing position on smooth surfaces is actually inboard of the controls, and in the rough it is better to get a hold on the grips. The seated climbing position on the bar-ends feels wrong.

I like bar-ends generally, but I am pretty sceptical of the benefits when you've got a wide, swept bar, as most risers are.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 9:03 pm
 Epic
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I used bar ends on my riser bar at Mayhem. Nobody laughed at me as I rode passed them all walking up the Kenda Cimb ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 9:49 pm
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yep ive got onza bar ends on my zaskar le with flat bars !! ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 11:02 pm
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IMO, a Zsskar looks wrong without bar ends.


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 11:07 pm
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BD has pretty much hit the nail on the head here, the reason Bar ends became popular in the first place was because bars had got so narrow that climbing was a real PITA, with the RE-introduction* of wider riser bars, hands were wider; more climbing oomph, less need for bar ends...

* Yep re-introduction. Narrow flat bars were a 90's fashion lead flash in the pan, original clunkers had big 'ole cow horns, risers have been on bikes for longer now than flat bars ever were. Sorry, all you retro heads...


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 11:21 pm
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Yep re-introduction. Narrow flat bars were a 90's fashion lead flash in the pan, original clunkers had big 'ole cow horns, risers have been on bikes for longer now than flat bars ever were. Sorry, all you retro heads...

You are a scholar sir!


 
Posted : 23/06/2009 11:45 pm
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nickc - Member
...Narrow flat bars were a 90's fashion lead flash in the pan, original clunkers had big 'ole cow horns, risers have been on bikes for longer now than flat bars ever were. Sorry, all you retro heads...

All us old blokes lusted after Vincents in our yoof, so flat bars were ace.

Before flat bars we rode offroad with full drop bars and crap calliper brakes.


 
Posted : 24/06/2009 12:29 am
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[i]"the reason Bar ends became popular in the first place was because bars had got so narrow that climbing was a real PITA,[/i]"

... or wasn't it the other way round?

I'm sure that I started off in 1989 I rode with very wide [b]flat[/b] bars, then when bar ends came along - the effective bar grip width became shortened to accomodate all that extra space taken up by the bar ends...

... Then when people stopped using bar ends, the shorter effective handlebar length remained in vogue, because people had simply got used to it / it was seen as fashionably jey.

That's how I remember it, anyway.

*sighs* (oh for the days when being jey was cool)

You gota love the awesome ponceyness of this sport - the way we can muse endlessly about bar lengths, rise, sweep, what strictly 'goes' with what etc.


 
Posted : 24/06/2009 2:05 am
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i've got bar ends on my raceface next riser which is attached to my blur xc. no way would i do a marathon or 24 hour event without them. being able to switch hand positions is very important to me, especially as i use gripshifts


 
Posted : 24/06/2009 8:27 am