I was over at xtri.com looking at some pictures of the pro’s bike’s. I saw a photo Hellriegel riding with sti’s on cow horns. Anybody run this set-up and why go with it over bar-end shifters? Thanks
NO! please don’t do it! Some pros do silly things.
i use sti’s on bullhorns and it works for me. imho, i would rather have shifting accessible while climbing. more stable for me. only problem is there are cables everywhere (i can’t figure out a way to hide them)!
I did this one season and had to make a notch in the bar for the cables. Shifting was not smooth prior to cutting the notches.
if it’s a hilly course sti on the cow horns is the way to go, if it’s a flatter course then shifters on the aerobars…that being said my fiancee still holds the bike course record at IM Florida using sti shifters on her cow horns…silly? Same goes for hellriegel, it’s a personal preference.
I have STI’s on cow horns too. Very happy with the configuration.
Cheers,
dt.
Tom Demerly,
Can you explain why you say “don’t do it?” Like some of the other posters here, I do it on my bike right now for a number of reasons–it works well on the terrain I ride and will race most of the time this year, my season will be affected & shortened by deployment, it’s cheaper right now given the circumstances, etc. I’d like to hear a more reasoned answer (a more Demerly-esque answer) on why you recommend against it.
Ben
It would take a lot of balls to say that he is doing it “wrong”. They don’t nickname that guy “Hellrider” for nuthin’.
Could a bike have both bar-ends and STI’s? I know, stupid question, but I was thinking about this just a day ago. Sorry for the bump!
“Could a bike have both bar-ends and STI’s?”
Profile actually makes an adapter for this.
http://www.profile-design.com/products_brakes&shifters_stiadapter.html
It would take a lot of balls to say that he is doing it “wrong”. They don’t nickname that guy “Hellrider” for nuthin’.
I think its actually “Hell on Wheels”
Works great for me. I think is much better than bar ends. Can shift when I need to, climbing, standing, accelerating from corners. On the flats(don’t do a LOT of shifting there), it’s very simple to reach over and click the STI while staying aero. I think using barend is just a money saving(or profit increasing) tactic by the bike mfg’s.
Alot of teams in the tour, giro, etc. do this when they set up their bikes for time trials. I suppose it makes it easier when they are using their road bikes at TT bikes, which a surprisiong number of pro riders actually do. these ar not the top TTers, mind you, so i suppose the mechanics don’t spend the same ammount of energy on putting them onto optimum TTing machines.
tommy