This may be one of the pop-up "trends" people are going to laugh at big time in a year or two.........I flippped the 1" riser bars upside down on my DH bike....puts them at about 38" high with a 888 and integrated stem. The difference is positively surprising.
Worth a try for those wanting lower bars.
Makes the front of the bike look like a Muskox
hm, no. i'm laughing right now.This may be one of the pop-up "trends" people are going to laugh at big time in a year or two.........
you could get rid of the forward sweep by rotating them 180 degrees....Does it not bother you that your bars now have down and forward sweep to them?
I'm certainly not advocating the practice, but if you flip them "end-to-end" so to speak, you get the downward rise and the sweep is still back towards the rider, as it's meant to be.hm, no. i'm laughing right now.
bars don't just have a rise to them, they also have a sweep back/up to them... flipping that is just stupid.
Much of the time, yes. It's stupid not because of the way you like it, it's stupid because you're putting the bars at a high risk of failing.Arn't bars ment to take stress from a certain angle? Flipping them would make them more prone to bending or snapping. I don't know if that is right or not.
Believe me, it looks weird. But the guys I've seen doing it are charging some huge jumps and generally going a hell of a lot bigger than I do, so who am I to judge? Whatever works for them is cool with me.i wanna see pics because it seems like it would feel goofy no matter what
Go Burt!----------------------------------------------------------------
I hope so.This may be one of the pop-up "trends" people are going to laugh at big time in a year or two.........
I was going to say the same thing. I'd like someone to go down the Mt. Snow course with their bars upside down. Ha! How 'bout Champeray! HaHa!This just seems dumb because leaning farther forward would make you more prone to going over the handle bars when descending. The idea of riser bars is to get you up and back so that you don't go over the bars. Typically a DH bar has a 1.5-2" rise and a cross bar has a 0-1" rise.
I was going to say the same thing. I'd like someone to go down the Mt. Snow course with their bars upside down. Ha! How 'bout Champeray! HaHa!
Exactly what I was going to say.The guy in the picture I posted (Donnie) HAS gone down the Mt. Snow course. 95% of DH racers out there these days like to keep their front ends as low as possible for various reasons. Why do you think fork manufacturers are trying to keep A-C heights on DC forks as low as possible, people are going to flat crowns, integrated stems and low-rise (and sometimes flat) bars? If you're worried about going over the bars with a 2" rise bar, I would say rise is the least of your worries.
2nd that, bikes handle better with lower center of gravityExactly what I was going to say.
Do you have the FEA to prove it? I'm not doubting that bars are designed to be run right-side up but I'm not sure that running one upside down would make the risk of failing that much higher.Much of the time, yes. It's stupid not because of the way you like it, it's stupid because you're putting the bars at a high risk of failing.
hahaha why not just take out all those spacers under the crown?photos...
post of the day!! and why are they in there anyway?hahaha why not just take out all those spacers under the crown?
I tried flipping my bars because i saw donnie's (the guy in the picture) and thought, maybe that would work. I didnt like it that low, but it still works the same and is plenty safe. In fact, donnie flips his bars and they are carbon, and hes a semi pro.