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  #16  
Old Today, 10:48 AM
Soloist604 Soloist604 is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 93
To add more fuel to the fire, I've had multiple bike fits in the past (with arguably the best fitter in my city) and they've always said that they can "work with" both sizes when doing their Retul-based fit. Makes me think that all the noise about going from 172.5mm to 170mm is just that...noise.
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  #17  
Old Today, 11:27 AM
Turkle Turkle is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2020
Location: RVA
Posts: 1,723
I notice an immediate difference when I switch between 172.5 and 170s.

My trainer is the Stages SB20 bike, so it's easy for me to switch crank length without adjusting any other factor, like saddle or bar position.

My fitter wanted me to switch from 172.5 to 170, so I did it first on the trainer. I immediately noticed the difference. Better for the hips, way worse for my knees. So I've stuck with 172.5.

These threads always get so many comments from riders that say they can't tell the difference. I almost can't believe it! The difference is immediately noticeable to me.
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  #18  
Old Today, 11:37 AM
John H. John H. is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 4,704
Shorter cranks.

I agree with most of what has been written. Crank length is more of a fit solution than performance solution- Unless you were previously on a wildly wrong crank length.

1.) Folks with lower saddle heights tend to be the ones on cranks that are too long. I think most rider with saddle heights <70cm should be on 165 or shorter.
2.) Short cranks tend to help a lot with janky hips and sizable guts. They just create space.

As another poster said- Try may fix one issue but create another. I was one 170 cranks for several years. In the last year I switched back to 172.5. No power increase, but the inner hamstring issue I had on the left side, and the right outer knee issue have sorted themselves out.
That said, I am still curious to try something noticeably short like 165 (my saddle height is ~72.5). More to see what it does for an aero position.
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  #19  
Old Today, 11:51 AM
unterhausen unterhausen is online now
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Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
Posts: 7,207
I got some 172mm cranks BITD. I thought they bogged me down. Pretty funny. Then more recently, I bought some used cranks from someone and rode them happily for a year before I realized they were 172.5 and realized it doesn't matter. I think my gravel bike has 170mm cranks on it now, but I had 175mm cranks before and I could switch back and forth with my road bike with 170mm cranks and not notice a difference. That includes sprinting downhill (in a 42-11) at the end of the weekly wednesday gravel world championships. The difference in saddle height matters when changing them on the same bike, but just barely.
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  #20  
Old Today, 01:50 PM
JMT3 JMT3 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2022
Location: Urbana, Illinois
Posts: 395
Me 6’ with a 35” inseam. Started many years ago on 175mm cranks. Went to 172.5mm cranks over 10 years ago and they felt much better than 175mm cranks. 3 years ago went to 165mm after all the threads on Slowtwitch and love them. The funny part when I pushed 175mm cranks I rode a 54, 42 front and a 11-18 straight block cassette and 60 to 75 RPM cadence was my normal. Now I ride a 53, 39 and a 11-26 11 speed cassette and my RPM average 85 to 90. Also could get by with junior gearing, if that is still a thing since I am rarely in the 11, 12, 13 or 14.
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