FSA Compact Bars
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Is there only one FSA Compact shape? Or, has there only been one FSA Compact shape? I ask this because in pictures some FSA Compact bars can look quite different from other FSA Compact bars.
Thanks.
Thanks.
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Compact refers to the drop shape, not the bar shape. So most of the fsa models will have a standard drop model and compact drop model. Look at the fsa website for more info.
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davidalone wrote:Compact refers to the drop shape, not the bar shape. So most of the fsa models will have a standard drop model and compact drop model. Look at the fsa website for more info.
I would be interested to know whether the dimensions of FSA Compact have changed since it was introduced and if there are any variants out there. Or are all FSA Compacts the same dimensions?
There's no need to get insulting
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my point remains. why not just go to the FSA site and take a look at published drop/reach figures? taht would answer your question.
Again, visiting the FSA site will yield the most definitive information but FSA does not make a variant of the 'Compact' drop. I suspect what you may have seen is one of the new 'Ergo' bars which has a 150mm drop and 80mm reach versus the Compact's 125mm drop and 80mm reach.Valbrona wrote:I would be interested to know whether the dimensions of FSA Compact have changed since it was introduced and if there are any variants out there.
- Michael
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"People should stop expecting normal from me... seriously, we all know it's never going to happen"
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Last edited by Causidicus on Tue Jun 17, 2014 10:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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and I suspect that you really wouldnt feel the difference in that 2mm.
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Last edited by Causidicus on Tue Jun 17, 2014 10:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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davidalone wrote:my point remains. why not just go to the FSA site and take a look at published drop/reach figures? taht would answer your question.
If I am interested in how the dimensions of the FSA Compact shape have changed over the years, how would looking at the FSA website help me with that? The FSA website just shows the dimensions of the FSA Compact shape how it is today.
Oh, I don't know, how about RTFM - i.e. take a look at FSA's tech support section where you might find technical reference documents for older products?Valbrona wrote:how would looking at the FSA website help me with that? The FSA website just shows the dimensions of the FSA Compact shape how it is today.
- Michael
"People should stop expecting normal from me... seriously, we all know it's never going to happen"
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Causidicus wrote:2mm can be quite significant when you have gone to the trouble of custom frame measurements. Even 1/2 a millimetre can be perceptible to some.
Alright, I'll bite. I'm a biomechanics researcher. My brother in law is a continental cyclist and a retul+serotta trained bike fitter who also makes custom steel bikes. we are both mechanical engineers who are starting our own bike-parts business together. we share notes pretty regularly. in our experience the human body is not perceptible enough to tell a 1/2mm difference. simply no way. at 0.5mm you are talking in terms of engineering manufacturing tolerances already (i.e. when your bike parts are manufactured, things are never perfect due to calibration/measurement errors, differences in the machine, etc.) . now 0.5mm would be approaching the low end of engineering tolerances, and I think bike parts are manufactured to slightly better toleracnes than that, but really, I'd bet you it wouldnt be difficult to find bike parts off spec in that region. these tolerances are good enough for aerospace/automotive applications, and they don't even make a difference in my research where I have machines requiring calibration way more precise than any human can need. you can feel the difference of 0.5mm? I sincerely doubt so. I'd bet its in your head. 0.5mm could arise from so many different things ( abit thicker layer of paint, poor lacquer job, improperly done bar tape, etc.) if your fit had to be dialed in to the 0.5mm, you'd spend more time getting your fit right than actually riding.
( in fact, I just did an experiment yesterday. a 4cm long, 3mm thick alumnium plate I tested deforms about 0.4mm when under 49kg of load. Now, I'll grant you that the shape of the sample in question plays a part as well, but it shows you the level of detail you're talking about. I wouldn't be surprised if your bars deformed somewhere in that region when under load, and 50kg isn't an unreasonable load to see your bars under. which would mean that you'd need to take into account ahndlebar flex under load if you wanted to set your bike up right, if according to you you can feel a 0.5mm difference! thats silly !)
now, I'd grant you, if you had some specific physical problem, there IS a chance that 2mm may be important to you. which is why i said I SUSPECTED the OP wouldn't feel the difference. but for the vast majority of the population anything below 5mm difference would be really difficult to judge the difference.
ms6073 wrote:Oh, I don't know, how about RTFM - i.e. take a look at FSA's tech support section where you might find technical reference documents for older products?Valbrona wrote:how would looking at the FSA website help me with that? The FSA website just shows the dimensions of the FSA Compact shape how it is today.
^ this. Or you could contact FSA customer support. you do that when you need to get a quotation in your day job, or when you're buying a car, or need help at a store. you ask the staff. people need to learn to use the search tools.
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