Please excuse the length of this post, but I need help. After a couple of years of riding less than I expected to, and never quite getting comfortable, I am facing the irritating fact that my road bike does not fit me, and I don't think we can make it fit.
I am 5'6 and I ride a 53cm 2003 Bianchi Veloce that I bought new in 2004. I was fitted at the bike shop, but it was my first road bike and I didn't really know how it should feel. I have bad knees so I thought my knee pain was just par for the course; I did not have any good comparisons to help me understand just how bad the reach was. I don't like riding this bike in town because I feel like the brakes are a million miles away; I thought my inability to ride in the drops was my own lack of flexibility until I rode for a while on a road bike that was otherwise way too small for me. I have never been able to get to the point where I can ride further or faster than I did right after I bought the bike, but I figured that was just because I am kind of clumsy and unathletic. (That could still be true.)
But yesterday my husband and I spent the entire day taking measurements, using online fit guides (this one and this one, although both are definitely biased for men), and swapping things around on my bike to try to make it fit. And I think what we have concluded is that there is no way to make this bike fit me.
First, both fit calculators had me on a 55/56cm bike. And even though that is obviously going to make the reach issue even worse, after literally hours of messing with seatpost setback and saddle height, I can see why those numbers came up, although it is mostly an issue of my having disproportionally long femurs. There is no way to make this bike fit me so that my knee is properly over the pedal (that KOPS thing). We bought a seatpost with about 25 mm of setback and I am still over an inch in front of the pedal. We ditched my Brooks saddle and went back to the one that gave me saddle sores, because a Brooks can't be set as far back as a modern saddle. It still wasn't enough. We found a seatpost with 35 mm of setback that we can mail order, but that still isn't going to do the job. In order to get the seat far enough back, I have to raise the saddle height to the point where I can't reach the pedal on the down stroke. This makes sense; I have in the past had to raise the seat in order to alleviate knee pain, and then I get a saddle sore on my right side because I am rocking so much on the down stroke. (We also learned that my right leg is shorter than my left. I had no idea I was such a freak of nature -- thank you, cycling.)
Second, of course adjusting that setback has made the reach even worse. We swapped out my 10cm stem for a 9cm stem because that was what we could buy locally, but that is nowhere near enough. I am going to try a 7cm stem, knowing that it is likely to make steering squirrelly, but I don't feel like I have a ton of other options that don't involve buying a new bike right this minute.
Obviously, this all makes it seem like I need a women's specific bike, and I probably do. We tested me out on my husband's Giant OCR comp, which is a medium, and we can adjust the saddle setback/height easily to get my knee in the right position, but then I would need an even shorter stem, like a 5cm or something. So that isn't going to work either.
I cannot afford to spend very much on a bike right now, and frankly I don't feel like I ride enough to justify it. I am also really afraid that I am going to be trading down and losing some things I really love about the Veloce, namely steel and Campy (nobody makes WSD in steel, do they?), but if I am not riding it because it does not fit, then I don't know what else to do. I did not like any of the women-specific models I test rode before I bought this one, but they were all aluminum, and I think they were also all too small for me -- everyone kept putting me on 51cm and 53cm frames, or even smaller ones. (That could be an issue of what is in stock. I don't think I have ever seen a 55cm women's frame in person.) I really love the way the Campy levers feel in my hands; I find them very comfortable and I would be sorry to lose that, especially in the price range I can afford.
These are the options I am thinking about, and I wanted to know if you guys have opinions or can think of other options.
1. Set it up with the 7cm stem and the super setback seatpost, which will get me within less than inch of proper knee-over-pedal position, and see if that is good enough. Save up for a custom steel frame.
Are there other components that we could swap out to make this better? Those brake levers for women, maybe? Do they make those for Campy? I thought about shorter cranks -- my current cranks are 170mm -- but I am having trouble envisioning whether that would help or hurt. I could raise the seat higher and get more setback that way, but the shorter crank would still mean that my knee isn't centered over the pedals, right? (Am I envisioning that right?) A longer crank might put my knee in the right place but I'd have to lower the seat in order to reach the pedal on the downstroke. Right?
2. Go shop for a women's specific bike, even though I would be looking at extreme low-end entry level right now because that would be what I can afford. I am probably being a baby about aluminum bikes, and I can certainly live with low-end components given how little I ride anyway. If I wind up riding more on a bike that fits better, I can upgrade later.
3. Something else I haven't thought of. Take up jogging or kayaking instead, and restrict my cycling to commuting and grocery shopping? I guess this is really what I have been doing for the past year.
I'm sorry this is so long, but I am hoping that those of you with lots of experience can help me out. Thank you in advance.