| |
|
|
|
|
|
Fitting A Road Bike
Frame To Your Needs |
| |
By Alastair
Hamilton
|
| |
Articles:
Road Bike
Tips
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
Fitting A Road
Bike Frame To
Your Needs
|
-
By Alastair
Hamilton
For most
of us, well-intentioned
but casual
bike riders
who secretly
believe
we might
be Lance
Armstrong's
heir if
we only
had a few
more hours
a day to
spend on
our bicycles,
buying a
new road
bike is
tantamount
to buying
a road bike
frame. The
frame is
what we're
thinking
of, something
new and
shiny and
colorful,
something
we suspect
even car
drivers
envy when
they see
us flash
through
the snarl
of traffic.
Truly, a
road bike
frame is
a beautiful
thing and
part of
the reason
we love
bicycling.
When you
have the
good fortune
to be looking
at new bicycles,
though,
you definitely
want to
look at
a few elements
besides
the color
of a road
bike frame.
Face it.
When you're
on your
way back
home from
a long Sunday
ride and
you're riding
your thirty-fifth
mile smack
into a stiff
headwind,
the fact
that your
frame is
cobalt blue
or even
Bianchi
green is
not going
to help
you. The
length of
your seat
tube is
going to
help you
and the
length of
your top
tube and
even the
angle of
the three
main tubes
all put
together
is going
to help
(or hinder)
you, but
color is
not.
If you shop
at a discount
store or
even a general
purpose
sports store,
if you get
any help
at all in
choosing
a bike that
fits you,
it will
probably
consist
of a clerk
instructing
you to stand
over the
top bar
of the frame
and see
if you can
comfortably
straddle
it with
your feet
on the floor.
This is
not really
particularly
helpful,
especially
if you happen
to have
anything
unique about
your physique,
like long
legs combined
with a short
torso. If
you have
long legs,
you can
straddle
almost any
bike, but
will your
body be
able to
relax comfortable
in the stretch
between
your saddle
and the
handlebars?
The whole
geometry
of the road
bike frame
matters
a lot to
fit. And
fit matters
excessively
to comfort.
If you're
a racer,
comfort
will not
be your
only consideration.
Indeed,
it may be
down among
the last
elements
you consider.
Speed is
not usually
built from
comfort,
and the
road bike
frame that
promotes
speed is
built of
different
materials
than one
used primarily
for recreational
riding.
Frames can
be made
of titanium,
chrome-moly,
aluminum
or steel,
and each
metal has
different
advantages
of weight
and strength.
Frame geometry
varies,
too, with
touring
bikes featuring
a longer
vertical
base and
top tube
than the
skittish
racing models.
So when
you're looking
at road
bike frames,
think beyond
the paint.
Get a frame
that fits
both you
and your
purpose.
Whether
you do your
research
online or
in a good
bike store,
you'll be
glad you
took the
time.
|
|
|
About The Author:
Alastair Hamilton
is a successful
writer who offers
a truly unique
depth of experience
in competitive
cycling, he
also contributes
adding technical
articles on
road bikes to
www.bike-cycling-reviews.com/road-bikes.html
. Reach further
information
on bicycle components
and cycling
reviews at
www.bike-cycling-reviews.com
Article Source:
http://www.articledashboard.com
|
|
Top of Page
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|