Traditional?Zombie Master wrote:Lovely bike, and I really appreciate that the "T" word wasn't used!
Tits?
Teutonic?
Twin?
Tubular?
Tire Thread? (counts double!)
Taco Time? (as above)
seventy-Two?
Traditional?Zombie Master wrote:Lovely bike, and I really appreciate that the "T" word wasn't used!
The bars on that bike are basically in the clip on position. I didn't say cafe racer position is good for around town. I said that bars and pegs, hands and legs, need to have a specific relationship to each other. I do know that others can have other opinions but if you move the hands down and back as this bike has, it changes the relationship of the foot to hand position in an awkward way. I would guess that the main reason bars are "Cafe'd" while foot position isn't is that it is more involved to change the foot position (more costly as well) and some people see the bars as the essential part of a cafe bike and may not even give foot position a second thought.Major Softie wrote:Interesting. Around town I'd rather ride that bike than one with clip-ons and rear-sets. My hands and wrists can't handle the "correct" seating position except when at speed with the wind-blast that clip-ons are designed for. With that bike, you keep your legs under you and can keep more weight off your hands.
Horses for courses, I guess. Even ergonomics are personal, not universal.
Those bars aren't far from our RS bars Chuey. Rear sets may be good on a track that's as smooth as a baby's bottom, but in the mountains where one finds mountain roads that are often bumpy, rear sets would be a pain in the butt.Chuey wrote:
I don't think that a bike with such low bars and stock peg position would be ideal around town or in the mountains.
Chuey
I've seen proof that you're a much better rider than I am. That said, I like my Cafe' in the mountains and not just on smooth roads. My pegs are affixed where the passenger pegs are normally situated.ME 109 wrote:Those bars aren't far from our RS bars Chuey. Rear sets may be good on a track that's as smooth as a baby's bottom, but in the mountains where one finds mountain roads that are often bumpy, rear sets would be a pain in the butt.Chuey wrote:
I don't think that a bike with such low bars and stock peg position would be ideal around town or in the mountains.
Chuey
The stock peg position allows far better control ime.