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Fixed my hand nunbness. Rev Grip short review

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  • Roxtar
    Living the Dream
    • Dec 2007
    • 2829

    #1

    Fixed my hand nunbness. Rev Grip short review

    I'd tried everything.
    Tilting brakes down helped, ESI silicone grips in chunky and extra chunky helped, Ergon GP-1s helped, but nothing ever really stopped my hands from getting numb during a ride.

    Read about Rev Grips but the tech behind it sounded iffy and $100 is a lot to gamble on iffy sounding tech. Found a used bike for my son with Rev Grips and decided it was a perfect opportunity to give them a shot. Took his bike out for a ride and, amazingly, no numbness. An occasional slight tingling but overall, a total win.

    I did go to the slightly larger size sleeves and very happy with the results. Best of all, I don't notice any difference between these and "normal" grips. That twisting thing is so slight, I don't notice it but just get the benefits.
    Yeah, $100 is stupid $ for grips but I'd have paid twice that to eliminate the numbness.
    Originally posted by Jer
    After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
    Originally posted by Ian Malcolm
    I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
    But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.
  • SJG
    Registered User
    • Dec 2015
    • 674

    #2
    I run them too. You can buy a "base" version which just has one set of dampers in it for around $50; can't tune it but it's half the cost.

    Another cheaper option is BMX style grips. They are slip on grips withOUT the lock-on grip sleeves. The sleeves thin out the rubber, and make them more harsh. A full rubber grip is a lot more cushy.

    Titanium bars also help A LOT removing trail chatter that passes right thru carbon and aluminum bars. I run them now and won't go back.

    Comment

    • skinipenem
      demented
      • Oct 2010
      • 2683

      #3
      I have them on an older dh bike if mine. I don't like them due to the twisty feeling. If I remember correctly, I also didn't like the size... but I have small hands.

      What improved my hand comfort was changing my grip to a more moto style i.e. holding the bar more like a doorknob.

      Fwiw
      Sent from my SM-S908U1 using Tapatalk
      No matter where you go, there you are. - BB

      Comment

      • Andeh
        Registered User
        • Feb 2014
        • 2290

        #4
        I'm glad they're helping you, but in my experience they actually made my hands hurt more than normal grips with asymmetrical cushioning (like DMR Deathgrips). What actually cured hand numbness for me was regularly stretching the posterior chain of muscles that runs from the wrist all the way the the bottom of the lat.

        Comment

        • Whiteroom_Guardian
          ____________________
          • May 2008
          • 17347

          #5
          I've been a disciple of the church of Rev Grips for several years now. Glad they are helping you. I was turned onto them racing NAEC several years go. Weekend before hand/arm pump was killing me there on their big top to bottom descents. Someone suggested I try the revs. Ordered them and had them on by the next weekend for the race. Night and day.

          I shudder to think I used to run paper thin dirt jumper grips like 90% of riders cause they "looked cool".
          www.LastBestRealty.com
          www.freeridesystems.com

          Comment

          • mntlion
            gear pimp extraordinaire
            • Oct 2003
            • 22525

            #6
            I would like to feel and try the grips, but at the price (and not having numbness) its an expensive demo..

            cool idea and good its helped others

            sigpic

            Comment

            • SKIP IN7RO
              Registered User
              • Feb 2014
              • 2617

              #7
              Here's a non-dentist option https://www.loamlab.bike/products/grips

              Comment

              • mntlion
                gear pimp extraordinaire
                • Oct 2003
                • 22525

                #8
                Originally posted by SKIP IN7RO
                Here's a non-dentist option https://www.loamlab.bike/products/grips
                thanks, From canada, so cheap shipping too. Interested to try this

                sigpic

                Comment

                • Andeh
                  Registered User
                  • Feb 2014
                  • 2290

                  #9
                  There's several brands that make eccentric thickness lock-on grips like that.
                  DMR Deathgrip
                  OneUp
                  ODI Elite Flow, AG-2
                  Ergon GE1, GDH

                  As someone who runs the edge of my palm right on the end of the grip, while I liked the feedback of knowing where the end of my hand was on grips with an a thicker outer end, it seemed to contribute to hand numbness. This seemed especially true on grips with a hard outer skid plate (AG-2). The tradeoff of course is that grips without that (Deathgrips, OneUp) get torn up faster.

                  One final thought based on my grip experiments: grip diameter is really dependent on hand size. It seems obvious, but if you wear a size medium glove, a thick 34mm grip is probably too large. Larger grip diameter decreases the security of your grip (less finger/thumb wrap), which leads to you overgripping which in turn causes arm pump. A good example of this would be to try doing pullups on a bar with quite large diameter vs a smaller normal diameter, or doing deadlifts with a very thick bar instead of a more slender one.

                  Comment

                  • SKIP IN7RO
                    Registered User
                    • Feb 2014
                    • 2617

                    #10
                    Originally posted by mntlion
                    thanks, From canada, so cheap shipping too. Interested to try this
                    They are on sale right now. Also, their stem is simply elegant and made by North Shore Billet

                    Comment

                    • XXX-er
                      Registered User
                      • Mar 2008
                      • 34296

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Andeh
                      One final thought based on my grip experiments: grip diameter is really dependent on hand size. It seems obvious, but if you wear a size medium glove, a thick 34mm grip is probably too large. Larger grip diameter decreases the security of your grip (less finger/thumb wrap), which leads to you overgripping which in turn causes arm pump. A good example of this would be to try doing pullups on a bar with quite large diameter vs a smaller normal diameter, or doing deadlifts with a very thick bar instead of a more slender one.
                      I have found this ^^ same thing, I've had tennis elbow 5 times ( painful ) from WW paddling but not since i went to swinging a small shaft Werner paddle.

                      For the bike I like the ODI lock-ons because they are slim but also the lock-on ring protects the end of my grip riding in the PU bed

                      I got small hands so a slim grip with a glove that has a lot of padding works for me BUT " YMMV "
                      Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

                      Comment

                      • Roxtar
                        Living the Dream
                        • Dec 2007
                        • 2829

                        #12
                        Originally posted by SKIP IN7RO
                        Here's a non-dentist option https://www.loamlab.bike/products/grips
                        Really not at all the same thing. The deal with the Rev Grips is the small amount of rotation allowed.
                        The linked ones don't do that.
                        Originally posted by Jer
                        After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
                        Originally posted by Ian Malcolm
                        I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
                        But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.

                        Comment

                        • Roxtar
                          Living the Dream
                          • Dec 2007
                          • 2829

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Andeh
                          One final thought based on my grip experiments: grip diameter is really dependent on hand size. It seems obvious, but if you wear a size medium glove, a thick 34mm grip is probably too large. Larger grip diameter decreases the security of your grip (less finger/thumb wrap), which leads to you overgripping which in turn causes arm pump. A good example of this would be to try doing pullups on a bar with quite large diameter vs a smaller normal diameter, or doing deadlifts with a very thick bar instead of a more slender one.
                          Good point. I wear an XL glove and went with the 32mm dia.
                          Originally posted by Jer
                          After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
                          Originally posted by Ian Malcolm
                          I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
                          But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.

                          Comment

                          • SJG
                            Registered User
                            • Dec 2015
                            • 674

                            #14
                            FWIW https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0891Y9ZSF

                            are an all rubber slip-on grip which eliminate a LOT of trail chatter. My wife uses them. They are long, cut down to size.

                            Good grips.

                            I run the expandable metal bar end caps, because I'm hitting rock-squeezers and trees in the tight spots all the time, and grips take a beating if you don't have them. Metal ones slip on the rocks/trees and aren't as grabby as the rubber ones, so I am less likely to crash LOL

                            Comment

                            • grinch
                              stole the who hash
                              • Sep 2009
                              • 16652

                              #15
                              I figure the rev grips would be too thicc. Thats the reason i ditched lock ons in favor of push ons. My wrists are pretty messed at this point and the ultra thin pushons work for me. Currently digging the renthals with renthal grip glue. Plus when i grab on to the bar to pull up over something i dont think i want grip float like the revs have. Itll take a lot for me to try something other than push ons at this point. It was getting scary hanging on at the bottom of long downhills. Just hanging on and losing speed. Much better now

                              Sent from my SM-A536W using TGR Forums mobile app

                              Comment

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