Forum menu
Do I need a 44 or 4...
 

[Closed] Do I need a 44 or 46cm drop bar?

Posts: 193
Free Member
Topic starter
 
[#8347898]

For a "gravel" bike

Is it based on shoulder width?

Presumably the extra bar width helps offroad?


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 8:14 pm
Posts: 9218
Free Member
 

Hip and trendy flared drops are apparently the in-thing. ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 8:16 pm
Posts: 17331
Full Member
 

How wide are your shoulders? For a small framed male of otherwise average height (179 cm), I have disproportionately wide shoulders. I ride a 44 on my road bike and a 46 on my cross and fixed bike. The extra width helps with leverage, or so I convince myself ๐Ÿ˜‰ . In reality it makes little difference, but you may want a slightly shorter stem with wider bars.


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 8:17 pm
 aP
Posts: 681
Free Member
 

I use 42cm road bars, currently for CX & mixed riding Salsa Cowbells which have a slight flair. Herself has used slight flared bars for 15 years or so, ending up with Cowbells as itm & 3T stopped making them.


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 8:24 pm
 goss
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

relating to the topic; will a wider non-flared drop, ex. 46cm, substitute a narrower 44cm cowbell ?
is the flare just superior ?


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 10:01 pm
Posts: 4968
Free Member
 

Why are road bike bar widths in cm and mountain in mm?


 
Posted : 15/02/2017 10:18 pm
Posts: 193
Free Member
Topic starter
 

thanks all

that's what i'm thinking too - a wider bar overall will be equivalent to a narrower flared bar


 
Posted : 16/02/2017 8:36 am
Posts: 12528
Full Member
 

I'm guessing it's a hangover from when mtb bars were made in inches and the length converted, so they needed the mm for the messy metric width, but road bars were in cm, so 46 is 46. ish.


 
Posted : 16/02/2017 9:59 am