Nice initial review, Bill.  I've been thinking about Albastaches since I 
started building my Sam up, but just can't commit to trying them.  I have tried 
Soma mustache bars, but never could get along with those.



On Friday, November 9, 2018 at 2:50:25 PM UTC-5, Bill Lindsay wrote:
> As you know I did a 200k brevet on my Leo Roadini last weekend. I decided a 
> little while back to experiment with Albastache bars on the Roadini to tweak 
> it's spot in the stable a little bit.  I'm looking for the athletic yet 
> civilized vibe of a 1980s sport-touring machine, and I also wanted to project 
> kind of the 2019-version of a 1992 XO-1.  That XO-1 angle was influenced in 
> part that I was already running a Nitto/Ritchey stem that originally came 
> stock on a Bridgestone XO-1.  
> 
> 
> 
> Last night I did the conversion. I pulled the 46cm Soba Noodle bars only.  
> Same stem, same shifters.  The only associated work was I took a couple 
> inches off the brake cable housing. The bar swap, tape job and first coat of 
> shellac took about an hour.  I left it to dry and this morning installed the 
> barcon shifters and took it for my 40-mile 3000ft commute to my office.  
> Here's the look:
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Executive summary: the Albastache bars are terrific.  They are neither 
> 'better' nor 'worse' than drop bars for me.  They are different and good 
> different. I'm happy to have an Albastache road bike in my stable and have no 
> qualms whatsoever about trying a 200k brevet on this bike in this 
> configuration.  
> 
> 
> 
> Like drop bars, Albastache bars give me several good places to put my hands.  
> I'm a cockpit fidgeter, and I move around quite a bit, particularly when solo 
> and particularly in the hills.  The selection of choices took a couple of 
> minutes to figure out, but they are all familiar and normal feeling to me.  I 
> did not use any of the super narrow real estate this morning because my 
> Ruthworks rackless Brevet Bag took up that space.  If we think of Albastache 
> bars as splayed out drop bars, then with my hands in the 'drops' is a very 
> upright comfortable cruising position.  I noticed that the combination of my 
> weight reasonably far back due to Leo's slack seat tube angle, and my upper 
> body up and back with the Albastache cockpit, the steering felt VERY light, 
> reminding me of the low trail bikes I've ridden.  That light touch 
> steerability Is not something I normally associate with Rivendells.  When I 
> plant myself into the beginning of the hooks or all the way into the hooks, 
> then I got more of the standard Riv steering feel where I think where I want 
> to go and my hips take care of it.  
> 
> 
> 
> The only awkwardness was deciding which position to use from a stop.  That 
> full forward position which puts my hands in a shape like they would be on a 
> straight bar, was the most awkward.  The best places were in the drops or the 
> beginning of the hook curve. That's the closest thing to the on-the-hoods 
> hand shape.  The cool thing is that I noticed when standing, as I was rocking 
> the bike, each time I slightly unloaded one hand, it was easy to wander 
> position like 1cm at a time.  Normally with drop bars I pick my hand-spot, 
> stand, do what I need to do, sit, and reposition my hands.  With Albastache I 
> was able to wander around incrementally while standing, which was kind of 
> cool.  
> 
> 
> 
> My full-tuck full-power positions sometimes had my elbows down below the 
> level of the drops.  On descents I found a position where my hands were in 
> the hooks near the brakelevers and my forearms were resting on the drops, 
> which was also kind of cool, like an aerobars position.  I did not attack the 
> ride itself, because the air quality is lousy from the wildfires.  Even 
> though the fire area is over 100 miles away, the smoke is everywhere, so I 
> took it comparatively easy.  For a speedcheck I went for a PR on the descent 
> down Redwood Road from the Chabot Park entrance to the Golf Course.  This 
> descent doesn't let me pedal much because I'm rolling too fast.  My time 
> mainly comes down to handling and aerodynamics.  I went for a Strava PR and I 
> got it.  Out of 16 total efforts on this segment, I was 15 seconds faster 
> than I had ever done it before (3:53 vs my previous best of 4:08).  That's in 
> the top 20% all-time on Strava, out of ~7000 riders.  Does that mean that 
> Albastache bars are objectively faster than drop bars?  No.  But that result 
> does support my opinion that I was not objectively slower using Albastache 
> bars on this bike.  
> 
> 
> 
> So, I'm pleased with my initial experience on Albastache bars. I'm not going 
> to go replace all the drop bars on all my bikes, but I'm glad to have an 
> Albastache road bike on-hand.  It is a distinct possibility that I'll freak 
> out my SFR comrades by running this bike at the December 200k
> 
> 
> 
> Bill Lindsay
> El Cerrito, CA

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