I've got a pair of Syntace bars, but honestly I can't remember right now what model. The elbow pads are adjustable for width, but they don't flip up out of the way. But, I have tiny hands, and I can actually grab the regular bars right under the elbow pads, so I don't feel like the aerobars are ever in the way. I do like the ones I have, but I am not experienced with any others.
As for your training schedule and building up, it is really hard to know what to tell you since we don't know how long you've been riding, what your fitness was before you started, and all those kinds of things.
You will find that you can glean a whole lot of info by using the search function here on TE to check out a lot of older threads. And, of course, by all means post your own questions!
What I would say is that in general, you are wise to start conservatively and learn how your body responds to the training. You get stronger and faster during recovery times, when your body mends itself and makes the adaptations to the stresses you put on it through training.
As for me, I spent a year or two on a paved trail riding an old steel mountain bike, and doing up to about 50 miles. After that came the Sequoia and into 60-70 mile rides. First flat century was, I think, 2005. Yesterday's ride was 80 miles and 7300' climbing, and my goal event this year is the Shasta Summit Century with 100 miles and 10,000' climbing. It is a hard, worthy goal for me for this year, which has been very personally stressful. Just getting to the ride is my victory, really. It is all so individual, and so dependent on personal details of fitness, training, other stresses in life, joint health, SO many things. I know a friend who started biking one April, and by that July she rode 130 miles in one day. She joined a racing team in September (5 months after starting to ride), and hasn't looked back. She just took to it! Everyone's different.
It sounds like you're doing great!



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I am considering a century in October if I think I'm up to it.
I think those men were just mad because I was passing them going up a hill in aero postion while they were struggling upright. Oh, the ego sometimes...

