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Saddle Angles





Ian G Batten
  
Suspecting that I needed to be able to lean forward a little
more, and also wanting more of my weight going through my
sit bones and less through my, er, ``soft tissue'', I
shifted my saddle 15mm back on the rail and tilted it down a
couple of grooves, then raised the post a bit. Yes, yes, I
know I should only change one variable at a time, but life's
too short.

End result: I can pedal at least a gear higher at the same
cadence and I chopped another five or ten minutes off the
trip to the office. Is saddle position _really_ that
critical? It does seem so...

ian

Jon Senior
  
<snip>
> End result: I can pedal at least a gear higher at the same
> cadence and I chopped another five or ten minutes off the
> trip to the office. Is saddle position _really_ that
> critical? It does seem so...

Yes. But you can take it to extremes. I once a friends bike
while we test rode another. His saddle position at the time
could only be described as "aggressive". There was no
discernible difference between sitting in the saddle and
climbing out to sprint. Fine for short hops, not much cop
for distance. He has now calmed it down a touch or two.

If you ride the same route every day and have found a major
difference in cycling came from these adjustments, try
making small changes (One thing at a time!) every day or so
and comparing the experience. When making any change makes
the ride worse, you've got it licked. Try and get someone to
photograph the setup (Preferably while you're riding) so
that if / when you change your bike you get quickly get back
to a good posture.

Jon

McBain_v1
  
Originally posted by Ian G Batten
Suspecting that I needed to be able to lean forward a little more, and also wanting more of my weight going through my sit bones and less through my, er, ``soft tissue'', I shifted my saddle 15mm back on the rail and tilted it down a couple of grooves, then raised the post a bit. Yes, yes, I know I should only change one variable at a time, but life's too short.

End result: I can pedal at least a gear higher at the same cadence and I chopped another five or ten minutes off the trip to the office. Is saddle position _really_ that critical? It does seem so...

ian


I too have experimented with saddle position, and I reckon it is slightly different on each of my three bikes, probably reflecting their different characteristics. However, the biggest single difference I noted was when I moved the saddle back on the rails by about 15mm and made sure that the saddle itself was parallel to the ground - made a big difference in my ability to climb whilst seated and extended the amount of time I can stay in the saddle before "the family jewels" go numb.

I'm thinking of getting myself a SaddleCo Flow saddle, but so far haven't managed to find a UK distributor. Anyone know where I can get a hold of this from a UK supplier?

John Hearns
  
I'm so sad that I read the subject here as "Saddle Angels"
and started to think what shiny new accessory it was.

My first thought was a cable device to stop the saddle being
stolen, but I've got one of those already.

Just for fun then, what would Saddle Angels be?

Whingin' Pom
  
On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 09:18:01 +0000, John Hearns <john@nospam.nospam>
() wrote:

>I'm so sad that I read the subject here as "Saddle Angels"
>and started to think what shiny new accessory it was.
>
>My first thought was a cable device to stop the saddle
>being stolen, but I've got one of those already.
>
>Just for fun then, what would Saddle Angels be?

Emergency call-out teams for the saddle-sore, ready with
helpful advice, padded shorts, soothing nostrums and the out
of hours numbers of reputable 'bentmongers.

;-)

--
Matt K Dunedin, NZ

Richard Goodman
  
"Ian G Batten" <I.G.Batten@batten.eu.org> wrote in message
news:c36jk5$ieg$1@news-out.ftel.co.uk...
>
> Suspecting that I needed to be able to lean forward a
> little more, and also wanting more of my weight going
> through my sit bones and less through my, er, ``soft
> tissue'', I shifted my saddle 15mm back on the rail and
> tilted it down a couple of grooves, then raised the post a
> bit. Yes, yes, I know I should only change one variable at
> a time, but life's too short.
>
> End result: I can pedal at least a gear higher at the same
> cadence and I chopped another five or ten minutes off the
> trip to the office. Is saddle position _really_ that
> critical? It does seem so...
>

I guess if it was badly wrong before such a difference
might be made!

Talking of saddle angles, twice recently I've seen parked
bikes with the saddle mounted at about 45 degrees to the
side and pointing slightly down - completely weird. The
first one I saw I thought might just be loose and that
perhaps the rider at least swings it to a more central
position when riding, but when I saw the second one like
that, just out of curosity I got hold of the saddle to see
if it was loose, and it was actually mounted firmly - and
therefore deliberately - like that. Strange how some people
ride their bikes!

Rich

Dirtylitterboxo
  
>I'm so sad that I read the subject here as "Saddle Angels"

You weren't the only one who read "angels" - ;-)

>Just for fun then, what would Saddle Angels be?

For me it's my Terry's Liberator TiLite saddle :-)

Cheers, helen s

--This is an invalid email address to avoid spam-- to get
correct one remove dependency on fame & fortune h*$el*$$e**-
nd***$o$ts***i*$*$m**m$$o*n**s@$*$a$$o**l.c**$*$om$$

Johnb
  
dirtylitterboxofferingstospammers wrote:
>
> >I'm so sad that I read the subject here as "Saddle
> >Angels"
>
> You weren't the only one who read "angels" - ;-)
>
> >Just for fun then, what would Saddle Angels be?
>
> For me it's my Terry's Liberator TiLite saddle :-)

Have you thought about one of these (vibrating saddle)?

http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-
Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=/netahtml/PTO/search-
bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PG01&s1=turudich&OS=turudi-
ch&RS=turudich

John B

davek
  
Matt wrote:
>Emergency call-out teams for the saddle-sore, ready with helpful advice, padded shorts, soothing nostrums and the out of hours numbers of reputable 'bentmongers.

...and preferably looking a bit like Charlies Angels too.

I could probably do with a visit from the Saddle Angels at the moment - I'm in the process of breaking in a new Brooks B17...

d.

Just Zis Guy
  
On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 15:47:03 GMT, davek
<usenet-forum@cyclingforums.com> wrote in message
<Xp_5c.24897$5q6.12031@fe12.usenetserver.com>:

>I'm in the process of breaking in a new Brooks B17...

ITYM a new Brooks B17 is in the process of breaking your
**** in...

--
Guy
===
May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after
posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk (http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk/)

88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at
Washington University

Jon Senior
  
"davek" <usenet-forum@cyclingforums.com> wrote in message
news:Xp_5c.24897$5q6.12031@fe12.usenetserver.com...
> I could probably do with a visit from the Saddle Angels at
> the moment - I'm in the process of breaking in a new
> Brooks B17...

I was under the impression that one didn't break in a
leather saddle. I thought they broke in the rider!

Jon

McBain_v1
  
Originally posted by Jon Senior
[BI was under the impression that one didn't break in a leather saddle. I thought they broke in the rider!

Jon [/B]


Correect, the saddle breaks all the nerves in your **** so that after a certain period you no longer feel pain and discomfort. You kid yourself that your saddle has been "broken in" when in fact it's just your backside that's been bust!

David Kenning
  
Guy wrote:
> ITYM a new Brooks B17 is in the process of breaking your
> **** in...

Indeed. I've done about 120 miles on it so far and still no
sign of 'give' despite frequent and liberal applications of
Proofide. But it's not all bad news - my friends love the
John Wayne impression.

d.

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