I rode a Specialized Hard Rock for 30 years but was about to stop riding 
altogether because of excruciating neck pain after every ride, even a sort 
one.  The handlebars were straight and wide-ish and I had to reach quite 
forward for them.   At the time, I did not know you could change components 
like the stem. But this bike, I think it was the long reach that was the 
worst culprit.   Along with too wide handlebars in an non-ergonomic hand 
possession

I rode a Speciaized Crossroad step through model (more upright than Hard 
Rock) and that became more comfortable when the bike shop shortened the 
handlebar width. 

I then found Rivendell. The handlebars are higher, I’m a bit more upright 
with less weight on my arms and shoulders, and the handlebars (Albatross 
mostly) are more ergonomic and are placed for proper reach.  

So, for me, it is a combination, but I think it’s the more upright 
position, with less pressure on my arms and shoulders because of the proper 
handlebar placement, width, and shape that helped most.   

Ultimately, the above fixes that helped me put less pressure on my arm and 
neck, which helped my neck issues.  Chiro and massage helps a lot too. 

Good luck to you

Roberta

On Sunday, May 31, 2026 at 7:41:55 PM UTC-4 Jay wrote:

> In your personal experience, have you suffered with neck pain and found 
> that sitting more upright on the bike has alleviated the pain?
>
> Prior to getting a Roadini over two years ago, my road bikes had 5-10cm of 
> drop from saddle to handlebar, and after years of this plus bad posture at 
> work, I had an unnatural bend in my cervical spine that sometimes causes 
> neck pain (that general area).  My current chiro helped me mostly resolve 
> this so that it's only sore after really long rides, when it's really 
> windy, or after a lot of riding.  Drop handlebars on my Roadini are about 
> level with the saddle, and I can usually ride with little to no pain in the 
> neck area.  
>
> I rode a lot in May, and that pain came back in a big way in the last 45 
> minutes of today's long ride with my friend.  I think the increased volume 
> in May was the main contributor.  However, this year, both the Roadini and 
> Fargo have drop bars.  Last year, I had Velo Orange Granola bars on the 
> Fargo.  Last year, I cannot recall that pain in my neck showing up once 
> with any severe or prolonged discomfort.  I'm now wondering if that's 
> because a 1/3rd of the rides were on the Fargo with the more upright (and 
> just, different) position, so it was less repetitive strain to my neck. 
>  I'm thinking of putting the Granola bars back on the Fargo.  It could also 
> be other factors (age - one year older, stress, or perhaps my position on 
> either bike has deteriorated somewhat).
>
> Thanks!
>

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