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Those of us who ride in winter's snow need leverage, believe me. You need it for cyclocross as well.
my rabbi friend chops bars, but that's just out of habit.
If you have never checked out Jason Ward's bike blog, bike curious, it is awesome. He is a good friend of mine and he builds some nice bikes, writes very well, and we like to argue with eachother about fixed gears....(I ride one....he thinks it is crazy!).
Having said that, one area of agreement we have is the stupidity of these stupid little bars. I don't think they look cool. They look foolish and too often are accompanied by no clips/straps, no brakes, no helmet, etc. Here is a nice post from bike curious about the fixie debate, but in particular, looking at these silly chopped bars.
http://bikecurious.blogspot.com/2008/07/to-fix-or-not-to-fix-and-th...
I am actually happy to see some folks that use them just fess up and say they are for looks, not function. That is the truth. They were developed not for NYC messengers trying to fit inbetween traffic, but for track sprinting in what is known as the "Egg" position. World record track sprinters like Graeme Obree use the narrow bars to force themself into extremely aerodynamic positions. Such as this:
Does that look COOL to you? Or comfortable? This makes sense if you need the power that these contorted positions demand, but think about the idea behind it....
1 - sprinters don't have to manuever. The old saying is turn left, go fast, therefore leverage and turning are not an issue.
2 - sprinters are going over 50 mph (!!!) in these record attempts, BUT comfort and control are the last things on their mind....the leverage of their legs and the aerodynamic tuck are what's driving the use of these bars.
3 - more recent world record attemtps are moving away from egg and extreme tuck positions in favor of
higher, wider bars that allow sprinters to fill their lungs more. Even the flying scottsman's later attempts were with wider bullhorns and aero bars.
Anyway, I have to laugh whenever I see these silly bars, just as i do with painted-on tight jeans, huge thrift-store sunglasses, and just about every other fashion trend there is.
The position changes later were due to the UCI outlawing those positions and requiring that handlebars meet certain size and shape specifications. The tuck and the superman positions were made illegal. It's the same reason why you won't see tri spokes in a UCI road race or disc brakes in a cyclocross race.
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