On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
<thill....@gmail.com> wrote:
> Seth: I think you're making far too much of the difficulty of
> adjusting bar height on threadless steerers. I have seen this rumor
> perpetuated again and again, but it simply isn't true, in my
> experience. On all my threadless bikes, I have enough steerer that I
> can move the bars a cm or even an inch or so either way in a matter of
> a minute, simply by loosening a couple bolts and moving a spacer from
> below to above the stem, or vice versa. Resetting the headset is
> trivial with any sealed bearing headset (and most threadless headsets
> are sealed bearing, unlike most currently available threaded
> units...). Just snug down the top cap, then tighten the stem bolts,
> and that's it. It's all done with a 5mm allen, no headset spanners
> required. There is no "giant pain in the ass" involved, unless, of
> course, your steerer is far shorter than it should be. In that worst-
> case scenario, there are threadless steerer extenders that are similar
> in function to the quill adapters you've described. As a matter of
> fact, one of the many reasons driving the widespread move to
> threadless is that it makes it MUCH easier for bike shop employees to
> fit a new bike to a buyer by swapping stems without monkeying around
> with the tape, levers, shifters, etc.
>

Jim,
 I have a burley tandem with a threadless headset/stem and having to
move it around to get the bars up was a giant pain in the ass.

I had a bianchi castro valley, same thing, In general, I've found that
since getting a rivendell that headset adjustment and maintenance,
including raising and lowering the bars, give me much less heartburn.

I'm not pulling the idea of not like threadless from a place of zero
experience with them. I'm coming from my own personal experience and
watching  what happens with normal use of a bike for me.

I have no doubt that you have vastly more experience from the
perspective of a bike shop owner and mechanic. Furthermore, I have no
doubt that threadless is easier for a bike shop to deal with. HOWEVER,
I do not buy a bike for the bike mechanic at the bike shop. I do not
buy anything b/c it is easier for the mechanics to work on it. I buy
it b/c it is easier for ME to use.

Remember, the mechanics can love whatever technology they will love,
but if it just continues to annoy customers then that's not good at
all.

I speak to that from well over a decade in computing - a field where
ignoring what is actually USEFUL to the customer in exchange for what
is easier for the developer has been promoted to HIGH ART.

-sv

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