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  1. Greymattershrinker88 on

    Do your feet hang up when pedaling? If so your options are adjusting foot placement, or shorter cranks. Even with shorter cranks it doesn’t make it so you’ll never bump your heel to your peg.

    I ride 160’s and love them, but it’s because they make spins feel easier. Hitting the peg with my heel is a bonus though

  2. Either learn how to pedal/place your foot without hitting your peg with your heel or get shorter cranks

  3. wobblerofweebles on

    You are running the same frame with shorter cranks (I rode 170mm) and same shoe size as me, and I also run four pegs. Your other comment said your heel hits the peg but I can tell you that mine doesn’t. It’s all about the way you ride, where you put your foot on the pedal, if you pick up or drop your heel and what tricks you’re doing. It’s not a universal thing for everyone. I personally do lots of fakies with and without a cassette and have never had an issue hitting my heels on my pegs. Making some adjustments to your foot placement and position could help but it might feel really unnatural to you. Considering you have a frame with a short rear end and you can’t go much shorter on your cranks, you might need to try to adjust unless you want to swap for a longer frame or take your back peg off on your non-dominant side like a lot of people do.

  4. I ride the shortest available chainstay, and it wigged me out at first too. You’ll get used to it after 2-3 sessions.

  5. Its_me_jayman on

    I’m 5’9 & shoe size 9.5 my new cranks are 175MM & have had no issues hitting the pegs

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