Lowering the stem and adjusting the bars.

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Stevec047

Über Member
Location
Saffron Walden
Having been riding for over 6 months I have found that my body has changed greatly.

It is only now that I have noticed I have spacers on the stem and am currently using all three spacers below the stem and the bars angled up in a more relaxed position.

This position means I rarely use the drops due to the positions and find it difficult to tuck in on fast sections of road.

So the question is should I drop the stem down and add the remaining spacer to the tip and at the same time rotate the bars so the drops are sitting level but then I would be leaning over the hoods more?
 

vickster

Squire
Try it and see?
 
Location
Loch side.
Having been riding for over 6 months I have found that my body has changed greatly.

It is only now that I have noticed I have spacers on the stem and am currently using all three spacers below the stem and the bars angled up in a more relaxed position.

This position means I rarely use the drops due to the positions and find it difficult to tuck in on fast sections of road.

So the question is should I drop the stem down and add the remaining spacer to the tip and at the same time rotate the bars so the drops are sitting level but then I would be leaning over the hoods more?
You are contradicting yourself.

If you find the bars too high, you should find it easy to go on the drops, not difficult.
 

jonny jeez

Legendary Member
Thanks I shall have a play whilst the bike is on the trainer just to see how I fit and then see where to go from there.
Are you happy that you know how to loosen, remove, replace and tighten everything...its straightforward but not how it used to be in the old days (you don't need a hammer!).

if so, play away and find that perfect position. glad to see you are getting more and more into the whole thing, soon you'll be shopping for new rims!

PS, I have my headset "slammed" (is that the correct word?) right down now with no spacers and even though i'm a big fella, I like the position.
 

GuyBoden

Guru
Location
Warrington
I found this guide from Bikeradar "How to adjust handlebar height" very helpful for modern bikes.

http://www.bikeradar.com/gear/article/how-to-adjust-handlebar-height-38622/

(Reading the info about each step on their web page is very informative.)
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Major changes in set up can lead to bike fit issues , if the OP lowers his position to quickly then it could cause issues, it would be easier to lower it a little bit over a number of rides.

Agreed, and I would assume that on a road bike the swapping of one spacer at a time would create less of a change than flipping the stem..?

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