My hand does move slightly forward to shift one direction, and slightly 
back to shift the other.  But both positions are comfortable and natural. 
Getti g leverage is easy both ways without having to let go of the bar 
while shifting, which is one of the problems I have the single thumb lever, 
sepending on where it is in the throw.    

In fact, my default grip when actuall riding along is forward, at the curve 
of the bar.  I agree that the gpal is to maintain all the potential grip 
positions, which is why I like the fact that they're on the inside of the 
bar)

The grip flange is soft enough that it folds under my palm and doesn't 
bother me.  In reality, those grips were just another item from my parts 
bins though.  I thought I'd use them until I got everything dialed in, and 
eventually create permanent grips with tape and padding.  This is working 
so well, that I think placement is already good, and I like the grips 
enough (they're extra long to take advantage of the whole straight section) 
) that I may end up just putting some cloth tape on the curve and calling 
it good.

On Saturday, August 26, 2023 at 1:59:04 PM UTC-6 DavidP wrote:

Great that you not only found a setup that works well for you, but that 
uses those neat shifters. A pair of the Diacompe wing shifters just went 
for a steal over on the iBob group.

Do you shift your hand forward to use the forward "wing" of the shifter? 
Does the grip flange interfere?

My Bosco bar bike uses a cheap Sunrace friction thumbie positioned on the 
ramp of the bars so it doesn't interfere with a range of hand positions but 
is also accessible from my primary cruising grip, which is a bit forward on 
the bar.

-Dave

On Saturday, August 26, 2023 at 12:35:01 PM UTC-4 iamkeith wrote:

Short story, I stumbled on the realization that butterfly shifters work 
very well on Bosco bars. I think dia compe has re-released something 
similar, and may be worth considering if, like me, you love bosco bars but 
never found the ideal shifter setup

I've tried thumb shifters in a variety of configurations over the years - 
inside, outside, reversed L-R and otherwise, with and without offset 
mounts, located on the straight grip section, the forward sloped area, and 
next to the stem clamp.   I was never satisfied though, and this feels the 
most natural yet.  

Longer story is that I had these bars on a Clem that I loved but imagined 
could be improved;  regreatably gave that frame away thinking I could just 
move all my parts to a Susie;  discovered that those were very different 
bikes and that the bosco bars didn't work as well; replaced those bars with 
tosco bars that are much better, but left the rest of the cockpit in 
place.  Then, my beloved Clem  frame was returned to me!!  I had the bosco 
bars, but needed new brakes and shifters;  didn't have the budget to buy 
new;  rummaged through my parts bins and found these old, lightly-used 
suntour butterfly shifters and 4-finger shimano levers, and LOVE them.

Ironically, the reason I have these is that I could never get them to feel 
right on drop bars as they were intended.  It always seemed like the levers 
were angled backward and would have worked better on the opposite sides.  
It felt the same here!  Since it had been working so well with left and 
right levers reversed on the clem, and then susie, i just did the same 
thing here and use them in friction mode.

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