alpinerabbit
08-08-2010, 09:14 AM
Remember me?
Remember this thread?
http://forums.teamestrogen.com/showthread.php?t=28141
well it gets better. I've really been off anything much because the aches and pains would keep coming back. Yeah, I rode some.
This spring I started back and I felt so "off" on the bike. Asymmetrical. My right foot pointed down more than my left and I felt like I needed to shift my butt off the right hand side of the seat to be comfortable.
I finally went to the sports doc to have a suspicion confirmed.
My right lower leg is one cm shorter than the left. OTOH, my left thigh is also a bit shorter. The hips end up straight again but that's why the PTs never saw a thing.
It seems logical as well, why I would have all my problems in the "shorter" leg. It needs to reach further down to reach the pedal = less training and f*็%ed up tibialis anterior muscle.
I now ride fairly comfortably with about 1cm lift under my right cleat and the cleat moved a good bit back. This only really works with my mtn. shoes, the road cleats don't move back far enough. But I have mtn. pedals on the one road bike, and if all else fails the other will get them too.
Problem is - i'm only even when seated and not when I stand up.
Maybe someone has some ideas how to perfect this setup?
Remember this thread?
http://forums.teamestrogen.com/showthread.php?t=28141
well it gets better. I've really been off anything much because the aches and pains would keep coming back. Yeah, I rode some.
This spring I started back and I felt so "off" on the bike. Asymmetrical. My right foot pointed down more than my left and I felt like I needed to shift my butt off the right hand side of the seat to be comfortable.
I finally went to the sports doc to have a suspicion confirmed.
My right lower leg is one cm shorter than the left. OTOH, my left thigh is also a bit shorter. The hips end up straight again but that's why the PTs never saw a thing.
It seems logical as well, why I would have all my problems in the "shorter" leg. It needs to reach further down to reach the pedal = less training and f*็%ed up tibialis anterior muscle.
I now ride fairly comfortably with about 1cm lift under my right cleat and the cleat moved a good bit back. This only really works with my mtn. shoes, the road cleats don't move back far enough. But I have mtn. pedals on the one road bike, and if all else fails the other will get them too.
Problem is - i'm only even when seated and not when I stand up.
Maybe someone has some ideas how to perfect this setup?