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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    848

    Diff between Mtn bike shorts and road shorts?

    Is there diff between mtn bike shorts and road shorts?

    I prefer the styling of the mtn bike shorts but if there is a diff in protection somehow then I'll go the road style (I'm a newb to road riding).

    Tks!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    235
    I find that road shorts tend to have a better pad than baggies do. So far the only baggies I've tried that seem truly comfy are the Shebeest Boardrider Capris (they have a shorts version which is similarly styled). The liner shorts are removable and the pad in the liner short is the same one they use in most of their other "good" shorts. Plus the capris are nice enough to wear alone!

    I've tried a few baggy mtb baggies that come with an attached liner short and they chafe like crazy because the liner short just doesn't fit right or stay in place. And of course they're less versatile because I can't wear the outside part alone.

    Aside from better chamois pads, road shorts tend to offer great features like compression, better fabric, and more panels (which = better fit) than what you would find in a liner short.

    So if you really feel more comfortable with baggies, I'd suggest you get the ones that come with a detachable liner. Or get some good road shorts and wear them with liner-less baggies on top.

    Cari

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    848
    oh.. damn.. was hoping it was just aesthetics..

    tks for the answer

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Tustin, CA
    Posts
    1,308
    I think initially it was a matter of style... MTBer just wouldn't be seen in those bright colors lycra kits. They wanted to appear to be an "alternative" culture. Their shorts were baggy and shirts were baggy just to be different from rode riders.

    Of course, I now see bright colored roadie kits on lots of mountain bikers. I wear what's clean, having more road shorts than MTB baggies but I have to say there is a real functional difference. Now I do have one complaint about most women's MTB shorts - they are so short as to make no difference and offer no protection (most coming just a few inches below my hips). Because I'm tall, I buy and wear men's shorts. They usually hit me around the knee.

    In California, springtime is thistle season. Those baggier, sturdier shorts difinitely protect my legs against the thistles and stinging nettles. Also, just recently I had flats on my MTB bikes. It's goathead thorn season. Had to sit in the dirt (and in the thorns or rocks) to repair the tires. Both times I was wearing Lycra. Learned a lesson; from now on I'm wearing MTB shorts. Much better protection for my bum!!!

    Road shorts usually have a better chamois but that goes along with function. If road riding I sit constantly on the saddle. While MTBing I'm up
    and down alot so the chamois isn't really an issue. In fact, the lighter the better.

    Hope that answers your question.
    BCIpam - Nature Girl

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    The Woodlands/Houston Texas
    Posts
    169
    For mountain biking you don't need a thick padding, then you are in and out of the saddle all the time... thats different on a road bike, here is the thicker padding prefered.
    Also baggy pants and lose cycling close are not aerodynamic for road biking, it should fit snug on your body.

    Therese

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Salt Lake City, Utah
    Posts
    32

    Road shorts

    If you've been working hard show off that great bod in some nice tight lycra. Plus you'll look like an amateur if you are wearing mtb shorts on the road.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Tustin, CA
    Posts
    1,308
    Yeah hate to say this but my group of roadie friends tend to call those roadies who wear MTB shorts while riding "freds" or "Goofy Goobers"... not that its bad to wear MTB shorts on the road... just saying there are those who think that way... and I do apologize for them!
    BCIpam - Nature Girl

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387
    roguedog, have you ever _tried_ road shorts? I used to wear baggy MTB shorts, and then tried some road shorts, (on a MTB) and there is NO WAY I could ever wear baggy shorts again. Lycra is _so much_ better!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Nanci
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

  9. #9
    Kitsune06 Guest
    I tend to agree with everyone, Lycra is a LOT better... A little breezier, but overall more comfortable.
    Sometimes you just don't want to show *everyone* your assets, though.
    Another thing I've noticed about MTB shorts is because they're baggier, they handle crashes into sticks, etc better than lycra. Lycra can tear, leaving you *em*bareassed.
    If you want the protection and breatheability of lycra shorts with the stick-shedding ability of mtb shorts, you can try wearing real road shorts under very light board shorts, but they still get caught on the saddle, sometimes.

    REI also has padded underwear, that don't shift so much, but also go under whatever shorts you want.

    You *will* be judged as a newbie by some, but if *you* are comfortable in what you're wearing, what does it matter to them? Just get good and smoke 'em in their lycra, then tell 'em that training with the extra weight and wind resistance has done you wonders.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387
    I don't think the Sugoi RS Flexes will ever see a MTB- I would DIE if anything happened to them. But I have a bunch of Primals that have been crashed innumerable times and don't have a mark on them.
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

 

 

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