" ...maybe some day the wheel will turn and drop bars off road will come 
back into fashion 

Piaw, it's already happening. See: Tumbleweed, Salsa, Kona, Bearclaw, and 
the list goes on. 
I personally prefer a sweptback bar for the rough stuff so I can shift my 
weight rearward. taking some of the load off the front wheel while 
maintaining comfortable control of the brake levers - but I 'm an old fart. 
Drop bar MTBs/ATBs are definitely a thing though - I've been seeing more 
and more of them on my local dirt rides. It's all good!

On Tuesday, May 23, 2023 at 8:33:40 PM UTC-4 [email protected] wrote:

> This Saturday I took my Roadini and went up Spring Ridge Road (Windy Hill 
> OSP) and descended Crazy Pete's (Coal Creak OSP). 
> https://www.strava.com/activities/9109425331
>
> I had one of those amazing days where I was "on". I set PRs down Crazy 
> Pete's (the last time I did it I was on a MTB with front suspension). The 
> Roadini's 6-8 pounds lighter than my MTB, and without suspension, I felt 
> like I could place my bike on precisely whatever lines I wanted, so much so 
> that when I went at full speed, my friend on her dual suspension CF MTB (a 
> Juliana Furtado) couldn't keep up downhill.
>
> I think the drop bars on my Roadini are partly responsible --- the low 
> position feels natural, and the modulation on the Tektro 559s are nothing 
> short of amazing. I remembered that one of Bridgestone's mountain bikes 
> back in the 1980s came with drop bars. I dug around and found this article 
> about "dirt drop" bars: 
> https://g-tedproductions.blogspot.com/2008/10/drop-bar-for-mountain-biking-part-i.html
>
> I guess since cycling is so driven by fashion, maybe some day the wheel 
> will turn and drop bars off road will come back into fashion. My experience 
> made me wonder if you designed the frame so that those brake pads are at 
> the bottom of the slots on the Tektro 559s, how big a tire can you fit? I 
> found this video on youtube where someone managed to squeeze a 2" tire on 
> those: https://youtu.be/vGnNkQJz-Fk?t=389
>
> Those of you with AHH or Roadinis, have you tried taking your bikes down 
> rocky/rooty single track? Taking a MTB down those feels like driving a 
> jeep, but riding the Roadini down one feels like you're a sushi chef 
> carving fish with precision --- a completely different feeling.
>
> Piaw
>

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