My own opinion is to sell the Volpe and buy him a fairly lightweight and very upright hybrid bike with straight bars and handlegrip numbered shifters.
My own opinion is to sell the Volpe and buy him a fairly lightweight and very upright hybrid bike with straight bars and handlegrip numbered shifters.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I agree with Lisa. I don't think a mustache bar is going to make him happy -- it's not much less upright than drop bars, really, and your shifters might not work. An albatross bar will definitely require new shifters.
There are so many nice upright bikes out there now, mostly much less expensive than the Volpe. Even if you take a bit of a loss you will still save money, I think.
ETA: that Bike Forums thread is unintentionally hilarious ... "my wife loves her Volpe except she'd like for it to be a completely different bike!" If at the end of the day all you really love is the color, you need a different bike.
You could try the Northroad Bar - our LBS ordered it for the back of our tandem. It has some rise from the stem, and brings the bars way back towards you. It is compatible with bar ends. I think it was about $40.
CA
Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...
I switched a road/drop bar set up to a pair of Nitto All-Rounders (sort of a narrower version of the North Road) with new brake levers and such.
It wasn't cheap, but I absolutely love the frame and how well it fits, so it was worth it to me.
Take a look at all the pros and cons, write out an expense list (new bar, new stem, new brake levers, thumbies shifters, grips) and a labor estimate. Compare that to the $$ cost of switching to a completely different bike. Add in the value of bike-love. See what you come up with.
Meanwhile, get him to try some hybrids and see how they feel. That gives him a chance to both experience a different bike and test-ride different bars. I don't think I'd put more money into the Volpe until he has ridden a few other bikes/bars for comparison.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
we were out this morning and I mentioned dropping by the LBS where I bought my Jamis and having him try a Coda...
he said he didn't want to get all confused and would fiddle with the settings on the Volpe and see what happens. I think he WANTS to like drop bars. '. I have an A bar; we can just try it on the Volpe and see if it makes enough difference for him...
I agree...the moustache bar isn't right.
BUT! IF he likes the Albatross bar...can't we switch out the shimano brifters for SHimano bar ends and brake levers ...hardware wise? I already HAVE the bar at least. Will all 9speed shimano shifters work with the existing system?
Discipline is remembering what you want.
I'm watching this thread with great interest, I still have to do something about that Mariposa![]()
2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager
Elk, my husband and Sheldon Brown say yes, all Shimano 9-speeds are compatible.
The sweet thing about bar-ends is that you can flip them to friction... ahhhh!
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson