![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
I recently totally eliminated lower back pain in the exact same manner that everyone else is describing - I moved my seat forward 1.5 cm. Instantly 100% better. Night and day. It's nice when things are that easy. It also seems to have eliminated numbness in my feet - maybe a nerve was getting pinched back there? But I'm going to wait a while to see if that holds true.
Rode 100 miles the other day without any discomfort whatsoever! |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
I have very similar body type to you. 5'9" and 31 cycling inseam (30" jeans/pants). Anyhoo, had never heard of the move forward for back pain solution in my 40 years of riding, but I definitely like it better than the "raise bars at all costs" reply.
A few things to consider: you are probably on a smaller than average frame. I have not taken many breaks since the 80s so I am still sporting a Lemond-inspired fit on a 52 seat tube 53.5 top tube absolutely classic geometry. but many small bikes in the 52 range have a steep seat tube, like 74-75, which might work for some but limits setback to take weight off hands when it pushes 75. fwiw, my setback range is around 4-6 cm on a normal, non stubby saddle, with 2+ inches of drop. Endurance geometry is the opposite of what I/we need as those frames work best for people with long legs, short bodies--very similar to "women-inspired" designs. are your arms proportional to legs or body? (do you wear a short jacket, for example?) Reach and drop increase with arm length what works for me is to avoid curling the back and instead do the pelvic roll forward (gotta find a seat that works, I am a fan of new, short-nosed perches, but they do tend to push me forward). To do that, hamstring flexibility or a low enough saddle to allow the roll, is more important than core strength final thoughts: climbing can work the back over. age catches up with all of us. fitness and activity play a role too. My back is a little tender right now. No hills but in a deep tuck trying to hold the 30mph pace before getting spit out by the younguns, then drilling it home with the rest of the group. Kind of like a sore butt, sometimes you have to pay the man. When it gets chronic, mess with fit, but not for occasional aches and pains, especially as years pile on. I do a 14mph recovery ride at least once a week or so. Not by coach's order, body just needs it, and I get to check out the scenery in a relaxed position. Yoga is the bomb for this kind of thing too. I never practice but there are some fantastic poses that help to stretch and build core. |
#18
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
tight hamstrings also bring the saddle down |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|