Perhaps suspension seatpost would help?As a 60 something I don't have neck or back pain with low bars on my cross country MTB or drops on my road bike. I do find that on a hardtail bike if I'm too upright I doo get lower back pain if the surface is rough.
The point being I don't need such a thing (and I use a dropper), if you are too upright the shocks go straight up your spine. There is a however though, following hernia surgery with a titanium mesh implant maybe I will move to full suss for my EMTB but road bike is still no problemPerhaps suspension seatpost would help?
That could be an option, quite pricey though, thanks for the link!Look into suspension stems, cheaper, less weight and less maintenance than a suspension fork.
Yes I've had that problem in past (maybe 2 yrs ago), whilst working and putting screen on my big 32 monitor, you end up tilting you head upwards straining your neck to get the correct focus through vari-focals.I discovered after several long tours (2 weeks plus) that the neck pain I got was down to wearing vari-focals as I was craning my neck up a lot to focus in on the nearby obstacles on the road/towpath/bridleways.
Fortunately I now no longer need to wear glasses so for me the problem is no more.
Try squats. The video coach suggests ten squats beforehand will fire the glutes. On bike posture corrected: Voila! Neck pain alleviated.It is to complicated. I think I prefer neck pain.
At 56secs he said it's not suitable for swept/cruiser back handlebarsLook into suspension stems, cheaper, less weight and less maintenance than a suspension fork.