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Xplorer
May 2nd 06, 03:36 AM
Hi All,

I started commuting, 7 miles each way, on a 17" trek 930 MTB in September
of '05 and started having lots of hand pain. I went to a local shop and
they said the bike was too small. I bought a 19" Gary Fisher Marlin MTB. I
spent a lot of time adjusting the seat to get proper fit. During this time
I started having shoulder pain. Turns out I had to have Slap repair
surgery. I just started commuting again after four months. Recently I have
been trying to adjust the bike to make it easy on my shoulders (still in
therapy for the surgery). I pulled the handle bars in a bit and that
helped a little. Then I increased the height of the handle bars by about 3
inches. Now the shoulder pain isn't bad but now I'm starting to have wrist
pain. This is all road riding on a mountain bike. Is this the wrong tool
for the job? I would appreciate any thoughts you may have on this.

BTW, I have been mountain biking off an on about 10 years and never had
these problems until I started commuting.

Thanks,
Xplorer

May 2nd 06, 08:30 AM
Try softer grips and don't have death grip on the bars. Relax your hold
and make sure those elbows are slightly bent.

GWood
May 2nd 06, 08:44 PM
As you've discovered, a more upright posture generally relaxes the
shoulders, arms and wrists. Not all that efficient for pedalling in some
terrain, but it doesn't sound that that's the issue at this point.

Since you've raised your handlebars already, other items that might reduce
stress on wrist might include a shorter stem, or moving the seat forward a
bit. I also changed out my flat bars to a more swept design to allow my
wrists to "dorsiflex". That reduced some wrist fatigue for me over longer
rides.

HTH
Gary

May 2nd 06, 10:36 PM
Xplorer wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I started commuting, 7 miles each way, on a 17" trek 930 MTB in September
> of '05 and started having lots of hand pain. I went to a local shop and
> they said the bike was too small. I bought a 19" Gary Fisher Marlin MTB.

<snip>

>This is all road riding on a mountain bike. Is this the wrong tool
>for the job?

<snip>

No back pain, no shoulder pain, no wrist pain ....

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