JaapvanE wrote: ↑November 23rd, 2022, 7:52 pm
Slidewinder wrote: ↑November 23rd, 2022, 5:41 pm
They are all wrong. Heavy users of those machines will suffer the same injuries as are being reported here, and you and others pretending the rigid handle is not the cause will help to ensure nothing changes and the injuries will continue.
... unless you substantiate these wild claims with data or decent research, you are just as credible as the village idiot...etc.
Slidewinder wrote: ↑November 23rd, 2022, 5:41 pm
It is the old tale of everyone pretending that the Emperor is fully clothed, that there is nothing wrong. The intelligent and the educated are not immune from this groupthink. I came across a photo in a rowing magazine of a U.S. professor of biomechanics on a C2 machine...etc.
And what is your point with this unrelated anecdote anyway? That the professor in question is corrupt?
Unless you have the data or scientific studies that show...etc., you are... derailing a thread where people do have valid concerns.
My point about the professor anecdote is not that he is corrupt. The point (which I made clear) is that, as educated as he is, he too has been so influenced by groupthink (ie: that the Concept 2 Rowerg is utterly without design flaws) that he forgets what he knows to be true when he on a C2 unit. I suggest that this is also true of you. Also, as an aside, and regarding your insults. Prince Philip was once asked what constituted a gentleman. "Education and manners," he replied.
I am not "derailing a thread where people do have valid concerns". You sir are doing that by pretending that the rigid handle is not source of these injuries. Five posters on this thread report wrist and elbow injuries, but you and others act as if it is a great mystery how they sustained those injuries. I suggest you take a freeze frame of a sculling athlete at the end of a stroke. Notice that the hands, wrists, and forearms are in alignment. Notice too the position of the hands in relation to the torso. That position is not possible using the C2 stock handle. That position is possible if the handle modification advice I gave is followed (see my Nov. 22 post this thread). I gave that advice to another RowErg user. He had logged millions of meters but could no longer row because of the pain. In his words, "I trashed my elbows going those distances. I used ice like it was the only thing that mattered." He took my advice and reported back. His words again, "After a month on the machine, and still no pain."
Your reference to yoga is not relevant. Those are static poses. Rowing is dynamic. A rigid handle does not follow the natural movements of the user from catch to finish. All of the advice about holding the handle lightly in your fingers, how to orient one's elbows and so on, are all attempts to adapt to a non-compliant handle. It is an attempt by the user to alter his/her natural movement to be in compliance with the machine. It should be the other way around. At a human/machine interface the user should not be forced to adapt to the machine, the machine should adapt to the user. The push back against this reasoning by you and others here is baffling. I remember explaining this to an acquaintance. "Of course," he replied, "That should be obvious to anyone with intelligence."