OK, that is true, but as you say within limits. I run 8 cm stems on the 56
1/2 cm tt'd Rivs (I forgot the Ram: it has a 57 cm tt, and I use a 9, but
the 42 cm Noodles sweep back a cm or 2). When you start needing 6 cm stems,
something is less than ideal.


On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 6:09 PM, Deacon Patrick <lamontg...@mac.com> wrote:

> Sure it can, within the limits of stem length options.
>
> With abandon,
> Patrick
>
>
> On Monday, April 7, 2014 6:06:45 PM UTC-6, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
>> This only works if bar height is the accommodating variable. If you want
>> your bar at a certain pre-determined height in relation to the saddle, then
>> Grant's system doesn't work.
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Deacon Patrick <lamon...@mac.com> wrote:
>>
>>> George, I'm confused. Help me understand how #1 puts you at odds with
>>> Grant and Riv on their frame sizing criteria. As I understand it you just
>>> perfectly illustrated why their frame size criteria is PBH (then height to
>>> dial in cockpit), not height. This is precisely how they worked with me
>>> when I called them. I pointed out the frame they recommended was one size
>>> up from the charts online. Grant said something to the effect (not anywhere
>>> near a direct quote) of he's the master of the chart not the other way
>>> round and this will work, trust him. I did, and have never regretted it.
>>>
>>> With abandon,
>>> patrick
>>>
>>>
>>> On Monday, April 7, 2014 5:44:00 PM UTC-6, George Schick wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Patrick - yeah, I know it.  That's why I finished my thread post with
>>>> "...it certainly does seem as though not every bike is for every person…"
>>>>  And along with your list of possible variables there are two others worth
>>>> noting:
>>>>
>>>> 1)  (And this is the one where I get a bit crossways with Grant and Riv
>>>> on their frame sizing criteria)  Two people of exactly the same height and
>>>> weight can have completely different anatomies and therefore different
>>>> frame size (not to mention stem heights and lengths) requirements.  I can't
>>>> remember where I read it now, but a while back someone submitted a post
>>>> where he and a co-worker got to talking about frame sizing.  Both were the
>>>> same height.  One said that he was perfectly comfortable with frame size
>>>> "x" and the other said 'no way' and that he required frame size "y".  So
>>>> they went into the restroom with rulers that they could pull up to their
>>>> PBH and looked at themselves in the mirror.  Sure enough, one's ruler was
>>>> considerably higher than the other.  I'm 5'9", but have short legs for my
>>>> height - in a "normal" anatomy I'd be at least 6' given the length of my
>>>> arms and torso - I have shorter legs.  So I'm comfy on a 54cm whereas I've
>>>> been told I should be on a 56cm or even a 58cm.  Some of my most miserable
>>>> years of cycling back in the early 70's were when I let LBS sales types
>>>> talk me into bikes with 23" frames so I could "stretch  out", they said.
>>>>  Not only could I not stand over the bike at a stop without lifting one leg
>>>> off the ground, but I kept having to buy shorter and shorter stems to
>>>> accommodate the "large" frame.  It was not until the late 70's when I
>>>> ordered a frame from Chicago's Turin Bike (never heard what happened to
>>>> them or who might've built that frame) until I felt completely comfortable
>>>> on a bike that felt "quick and responsive" and everything else the OP says
>>>> the Ram lacks.  Due to financial issues I sold that frame as a complete
>>>> bike (equipped entirely with Campy Record components of the time) and
>>>> regretted it UNTIL ...
>>>>
>>>> 2)  …. about a decade ago when I was almost 30 years older and far less
>>>> flexible.  It seems that AGING has a lot to do with the way a bike feels
>>>> and handles and what's comfy and what's not.  I don't know how old the OP
>>>> is, but maybe he still has enough go-fast in him that the Ram just doesn't
>>>> feel responsive enough.   I understand that; I would've felt the same way
>>>> 30 years ago.  But not now.  So much of it is all in the sizing, the aging,
>>>> and the perception.  I live next to a city park and I see people of all
>>>> shapes, sizes, ages, and sexes riding their bikes on the park trail every
>>>> day, many of which appear to me to have their saddles too low or high,
>>>> wrong size frames, etc.  But I'm not about to go out there and critique
>>>> them and suggest something different. I've done that before - many years
>>>> ago when a flawed setup seemed obvious to me, only to get push-back from
>>>> the rider that they'd been riding like that for years and were perfectly
>>>> comfortable with it.
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, April 7, 2014 5:54:24 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> George: the OP's -- or OPs' -- negative perception of the Ram is
>>>>> entirely a personal matter. (For the record, it is also entirely
>>>>> legitimate.) What is in question is very obviously NOT a collection of Ram
>>>>> qualities alone, but a collection of experiences that certain riders have
>>>>> of their Rams. Or perhaps more precisely, we are discussing the
>>>>> relationship between certain riders and their Rams.
>>>>>
>>>>> Tires have been mentioned as one variable. There are probably an
>>>>> indefinite number of others, among which is a subset consisting of the 
>>>>> many
>>>>> ways in which a rider's build, pedaling style, gearing choices, cockpit 
>>>>> and
>>>>> saddle setup, and so on, affect the efficiency with which he can interact
>>>>> with the bike, and, in addition, the way the bike feels when he is
>>>>> interacting with it.
>>>>>
>>>>> I' guessing, but I am no merely groping in the dark, since I've at
>>>>> least started to see patterns in the relationship between "planing" and 
>>>>> the
>>>>> characteristics of those who experience it. One is pedaling style. Someone
>>>>> with a mashing pedaling style may well be less prone to benefit from a
>>>>> light-tubed frame; he may not be able to experience "planing" and may well
>>>>> find that a given stout-tubed bike performs very well. Someone who pedals
>>>>> fast in low gears may well find that same bike dead feeling.
>>>>>
>>>>> Another possibility: geometry and setup in relation to a rider's build
>>>>> and pedaling style. Again, no hard data but enough data to raise 
>>>>> legitimate
>>>>> "suspicions".
>>>>>
>>>>> Me, I find my blue-category Ram perfectly normal. It's not the fastest
>>>>> feeling bike I own, but it's not by any means the slowest. My erstwhile 
>>>>> Sam
>>>>> Hill felt more sluggish even with Jack Brown Greens (and the SH's 
>>>>> "feeling"
>>>>> was well within normal by my experience and standards -- just not what I'd
>>>>> choose as a fast road bike. I sold it for wholly other reasons, not the
>>>>> lack of spriteliness). Likewise, the Fargo shod with 35 mm Kojaks felt
>>>>> considerably less spritely than the Ram shod with the very same pair.
>>>>>
>>>>> Of which speaking: can anyone tell me the particular specs of the
>>>>> tubing for a 1973 Motobecane Grande Record? I know it is light 531, but
>>>>> what gauge and butts? I ask because of all the bikes I've owned in the 
>>>>> last
>>>>> 5-6 years, this had the lightest frame of any bike that I've owned
>>>>> (frameset considerably lighter by heft, anyway, than either of my 2
>>>>> remaining Riv customs), but I didn't experience any particular feeling of
>>>>> speed with it (granted there are all sorts of other factors here), while a
>>>>> stout tubed and very definitely heavier Herse that others had found
>>>>> sluggish (I think I am accurate with that qualifier) felt, to me,
>>>>> particularly spritely.
>>>>>
>>>>> Oh my, all of this hurts my little head.
>>>>>
>>>>> Patrick Moore, fighting spring headwinds and wishing dead-feeling
>>>>> frames were his only obstacle in ABQ, NM.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 3:17 PM, George Schick <bhi...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I've been reading through the threads on this post since it was
>>>>>> started last Friday and finally decided that I'd better get out my '04 
>>>>>> Ram
>>>>>> to see if maybe I've been missing something.  I haven't been on it all
>>>>>> Winter so I figured it would be like a "new" test.  So I rode it today 
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> for the life of me I can't see any of the same problems being discussed
>>>>>> here (except maybe the pedal strikes which may be lessened by lower 
>>>>>> profile
>>>>>> pedals).  Mine is a 54cm shod with 32mm Paselas (standard, not TG's).
>>>>>>  Maybe the larger 58cm frame makes a difference?  Maybe the headset or 
>>>>>> its
>>>>>> adjustment?  Dunno.  But, yes it certainly does seem as though not every
>>>>>> bike is for every person.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>   --
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Resumes, LinkedIn profiles, and letters that get interviews.
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>> Albuquerque, Nouvelle Mexique, Etats Unis
>>
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-- 
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Patrick Moore
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