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-   -   6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame? (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=214552)

Kyle Bramblesglarb March 9th 10 09:52 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
I'm a tall beginner rider preparing to buy my 1st road bike. I've
begun training for a century ride on my Trek 5400 MTB while I shop for
something faster.

I'm considering a Trek 1-series and for 2010 they offer a 64cm frame
in the Trek 1.5 bike. I was wondering if anybody could let me know if
the 64cm would make a noticable difference over the 62cm frame. I may
not be able to justify the increased cost and may end up just getting
a Trek 1.1, but I'm concerned about comfort and getting sore on long
rides. If starting with a larger frame would make a big difference,
I'll try justifying the additional expense.

I'm also wondering how much better the Tigara shifters are over Sora
and 2300's. I know veteran riders can tell the difference, but my
last road bike was a Schwinn in 1989... would I be able to tell?

BeeCharmer[_2_] March 10th 10 05:46 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
I'm 6'6" and have ridden and raced a 62cm Madone comfortably for
years. The issue isn't with your height; it's with the length of your
torso and legs. I'm fairly proportional and the top tube length
combined with a 120mm stem feels great and my seat post is not two
feet in the air. Someone shorter with longer legs might need a
shorter top tube.

brifters, I've got a Campy set with 30k on them. The diff between
Campy and Shimano is that one can rebuild the shifting mech with a
five dollar spring and it works as new. I seem to need one in the
right shifter at about 10k.

I'm considering a Trek 1-series and for 2010 they offer a 64cm frame
in the Trek 1.5 bike. *I was wondering if anybody could let me know if
the 64cm would make a noticable difference over the 62cm frame. *I may
not be able to justify the increased cost and may end up just getting
a Trek 1.1, but I'm concerned about comfort and getting sore on long
rides. *If starting with a larger frame would make a big difference,
I'll try justifying the additional expense.

I'm also wondering how much better the Tigara shifters are over Sora
and 2300's. *I know veteran riders can tell the difference, but my
last road bike was a Schwinn in 1989... would I be able to tell?



SMS March 10th 10 09:32 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
Kyle Bramblesglarb wrote:
I'm a tall beginner rider preparing to buy my 1st road bike. I've
begun training for a century ride on my Trek 5400 MTB while I shop for
something faster.

I'm considering a Trek 1-series and for 2010 they offer a 64cm frame
in the Trek 1.5 bike. I was wondering if anybody could let me know if
the 64cm would make a noticable difference over the 62cm frame. I may
not be able to justify the increased cost and may end up just getting
a Trek 1.1, but I'm concerned about comfort and getting sore on long
rides. If starting with a larger frame would make a big difference,
I'll try justifying the additional expense.

I'm also wondering how much better the Tigara shifters are over Sora
and 2300's. I know veteran riders can tell the difference, but my
last road bike was a Schwinn in 1989... would I be able to tell?


You're already doomed with the choices you've presented.

You should be getting something with a true 64 or 65 cm frame, i.e. like
something based on the Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen frame.

Alas, most of these large frame bicycles are going to cost you a
fortune. With the curse of compact frames, a 64 cm frame is not really a
64 cm frame anymore.

At least get a true 62 cm frame, like the Jamis Aurora. Also, in those
large frame sizes, you should think about steel, not aluminum. As others
in this thread have stated, you start to have frame cracking issues with
aluminum in bad places.

Ironically, there are some true 64cm bikes from Bikes Direct, in steel
or aluminum i.e.
"http://bikesdirect.com/products/mercier/mercier_serpensIX.htm"
"http://www.bikesdirect.com/products/motobecane/sprint_x.htm"
"http://www.bikesdirect.com/products/mercier/mercier_corvus.htm"

Pretty damn sad when you have to go online to buy a new bicycle because
so many manufacturers are in a race to the bottom in terms of frame
sizes and geometry. These days, if you're not between 5'8" and 6'2"
you're often S.O.L..

Whatever you do, don't buy a frame that's way too small then try to "fix
it" with ridiculously long seat posts and steer-tube extenders.

Chalo March 10th 10 09:33 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
BeeCharmer wrote:

brifters, I've got a Campy set with 30k on them. *The diff between
Campy and Shimano is that one can rebuild the shifting mech with a
five dollar spring and it works as new. *I seem to need one in the
right shifter at about 10k.


The problem with that is that then you're wedded to Campy drivetrain
parts, which have other shortcomings like untenable (for a big guy)
wheel dish.

Seeking out a less janky brifter seems like bending over backwards to
avoid simpler solutions that have worked better for decades.

Chalo

Peter Cole[_2_] March 10th 10 10:14 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
SMS wrote:

At least get a true 62 cm frame, like the Jamis Aurora. Also, in those
large frame sizes, you should think about steel, not aluminum. As others
in this thread have stated, you start to have frame cracking issues with
aluminum in bad places.


That's not what people said, they said that particular dropout style
than Cannondale used may or may not have reliability issues.

The OP is 6'6", Chalo is 6'8", I'm 6'10", how tall are you? Aluminum is
actually a pretty good frame material for big frames, it makes for a
light stiff bike. It may crack, but so many anything else. Nothing lasts
forever. So far, I've gotten better longevity from my Cannondale frame
(hasn't failed) than my Raleigh's (2 failed), nor have either of my
aluminum mountain bikes failed. Lots of miles, lots of rough service.
Frame failure isn't worth obsessing about, cranks, seat posts,
handlebars and stems worry me much more, and they're almost always aluminum.

landotter March 10th 10 10:39 PM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
On Mar 10, 2:32*pm, SMS wrote:

Also, in those
large frame sizes, you should think about steel, not aluminum. As others
in this thread have stated, you start to have frame cracking issues with
aluminum in bad places.


Dude, are you a Republican? Because you seem to love hammering on the
bull**** and fear based talking points. One model of Cannondale had
really stupid cantilevered dropouts--and you're going to use this
"proof" to start pushing your talking points? Give it a ****ing rest,
already. Modern metal frames, which aren't built heroically light,
have a very good reliability record. The rare broken frame we see
around here is usually older or an ultralight bike, often titanium.
But I wouldn't go trashing the agriculturally durable frames from
Habanero because some other framebuilder specced dumb tube thicknesses.

Tim McNamara March 11th 10 01:45 AM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
In article
,
Kyle Bramblesglarb wrote:

I'm a tall beginner rider preparing to buy my 1st road bike. I've
begun training for a century ride on my Trek 5400 MTB while I shop
for something faster.

I'm considering a Trek 1-series and for 2010 they offer a 64cm frame
in the Trek 1.5 bike. I was wondering if anybody could let me know
if the 64cm would make a noticable difference over the 62cm frame. I
may not be able to justify the increased cost and may end up just
getting a Trek 1.1, but I'm concerned about comfort and getting sore
on long rides. If starting with a larger frame would make a big
difference, I'll try justifying the additional expense.


The larger frame will make a big difference- I would recommend
considering an even larger frame, a 66 or 68 at your height. In order
not to feel cramped and uncomfortable with a 62 or even a 64 you would
need to resort to very long seatpost and stem.

I'm 6'4" and a 64 is about right for me.

--
I want to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather,
not screaming in terror like his passengers.

Peter Meilstrup March 11th 10 01:48 AM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
On Mar 10, 12:32*pm, SMS wrote:
Kyle Bramblesglarb wrote:
I'm a tall beginner rider preparing to buy my 1st road bike. *I've
begun training for a century ride on my Trek 5400 MTB while I shop for
something faster.


I'm considering a Trek 1-series and for 2010 they offer a 64cm frame
in the Trek 1.5 bike. *I was wondering if anybody could let me know if
the 64cm would make a noticable difference over the 62cm frame. *I may
not be able to justify the increased cost and may end up just getting
a Trek 1.1, but I'm concerned about comfort and getting sore on long
rides. *If starting with a larger frame would make a big difference,
I'll try justifying the additional expense.


I'm also wondering how much better the Tigara shifters are over Sora
and 2300's. *I know veteran riders can tell the difference, but my
last road bike was a Schwinn in 1989... would I be able to tell?


You're already doomed with the choices you've presented.

You should be getting something with a true 64 or 65 cm frame, i.e. like
something based on the Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen frame.

Alas, most of these large frame bicycles are going to cost you a
fortune. With the curse of compact frames, a 64 cm frame is not really a
64 cm frame anymore.

At least get a true 62 cm frame, like the Jamis Aurora.


Augh! With a 72 degree seat tube and 59cm top tube the Jamis has 2.5cm
less reach than the Trek. Additionally, the top of its head tube is
fully 6cm lower!

I don't understand why people fetishize the height of the seat
cluster. Seeing as how the seat post extension has a wider range of
adjustment than any other bicycle component, seat tube length is quite
possibly the least relevant piece of information you can have about a
bike frame. Its last relevance was in the days of level top tubes,
when it happened to also determine the height of the top of the head
tube.

Don't fall into the trap of thinking that because old bikes had level
top tubes and were made in decent sizes, that a currently produced
level top tube bike will be better than one with a sloping top tube.
In this case it led to a recommendation of a bike that's 3 sizes too
small instead of just 1.

The most important parameters of bike frame size are (1) how high the
top of the head tube is above the bottom bracket and (2) how far
forward the head tube is in front of the bottom bracket. Taken
together these two parameters determine where you can put the
handlebars in relation to the feet.

In days of yore we measured these parameters indirectly via the seat
tube length and top tube length, and riders who prefer a particular
fore-aft saddle position had to mentally adjust the top tube length
when comparing two frames with differing seat tube angles (holding top
tube length constant, a shallower seat angle robs the frame of reach,
as you end up sliding the saddle forward to compensate.) Nowadays with
varying top tube angles the seat tube can no longer masquerade as an
indicator of head tube height, so the tables list some mishmash of
"effective" tube lengths and you have to do a bunch of trigonometry to
compare between brands.

It might be better to just measure (1) and (2) directly -- this is
called "stack" and "reach" and a few manufacturers list it, including
Trek.

Compact geometry ought to have been a boon for most riders, allowing a
higher handlebar placement than traditional race fit. I think it does
help shorter riders (who are a larger proportion of the underserved
riding public than us tall guys.) However it also coincided with a
development in racer fashion of riding with a very deep saddle-bar
drop and using the "hoods" as primary hand position. So everyone now
rides on frames that are a size or two too small, level top tube or
no. Tall people who remember when bike frames were made large seem to
misattribute the cause and blame sloping top tubes for their woes.

Also, in those
large frame sizes, you should think about steel, not aluminum. As others
in this thread have stated, you start to have frame cracking issues with
aluminum in bad places.

Ironically, there are some true 64cm bikes from Bikes Direct, in steel
or aluminum i.e.
"http://bikesdirect.com/products/mercier/mercier_serpensIX.htm"
"http://www.bikesdirect.com/products/motobecane/sprint_x.htm"
"http://www.bikesdirect.com/products/mercier/mercier_corvus.htm"


These have a reasonable amount of reach, particularly the aluminum
one.

Peter

SMS March 11th 10 01:50 AM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
landotter wrote:
On Mar 10, 2:32 pm, SMS wrote:

Also, in those
large frame sizes, you should think about steel, not aluminum. As others
in this thread have stated, you start to have frame cracking issues with
aluminum in bad places.


Dude, are you a Republican?


Hey, no need for those kind of insults. We can disagree on stuff, but
accusing someone of being a Republican is really hitting below the belt.

Because you seem to love hammering on the
bull**** and fear based talking points.


Not "bull****" at all. The pros and cons of the different types of frame
materials are well known and accepted.

One model of Cannondale had
really stupid cantilevered dropouts--and you're going to use this
"proof" to start pushing your talking points?


It's not just Cannondale, or that one model.

SMS March 11th 10 02:29 AM

6'6" beginner rider wonders: 62cm or 64cm Trek frame?
 
Tim McNamara wrote:

snip

The larger frame will make a big difference- I would recommend
considering an even larger frame, a 66 or 68 at your height. In order
not to feel cramped and uncomfortable with a 62 or even a 64 you would
need to resort to very long seatpost and stem.

I'm 6'4" and a 64 is about right for me.


66 or 68 are _really_ hard to find, while there are still some true 64
cm frames being sold. Probably need a custom frame for something that
big. Koga-Miyata makes 66 cm road bikes but they aren't sold in the
United States.

But it's true that a larger frame would be better (depending on the leg
length too). There's a tendency for bike shops to steer customers toward
frames that are way too small.

Very good article about all this, and a good sizing chart, at
"http://www.rivbike.com/article/bike_fit/choosing_a_frame_size"

Well one good thing is that short people now have a much better
selection of bicycles than in the past.


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