Yeah TJ,

but on my foot, moving the cleat from mid-ball to mid-arch, would be 3
inches. Now this is an academic exercise for me so far anyway as I
cannot move my cleats that far and there ain't no way I am buying
those butt-ugly shoes for that kind of money. But a 3 inch change in
position is huge

On Jun 9, 5:20 pm, TJ Ramb <tjs...@gmail.com> wrote:
> don't over anal-yze it - the prmise of the article -
>  just ride and see how you feel after a week or two of riding.
> you may just find a better position !
>
> On Jun 10, 12:36 am, Will <wpm...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > <<...if you move your foot forward on the pedal, should you also move
> > your saddle forward on the post?>>
>
> > Perhaps the answer depends on whether you tend to pedal with "flat"
> > feet (that is, heel drops as much as your toe at the bottom of a
> > stroke), or "pointed" toes (toe pointed lower than the heel at bottom
> > of stroke, as some riders prefer). If the latter, there may be
> > arguments for lowering the seat post. Thanks for sharing the article.- Hide 
> > quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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