Care and feeding of a Brooks Saddle
#1
Wrench Savant
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Care and feeding of a Brooks Saddle
I bought a bike at a yard sale a month ago which has a nearly new brooks narrow racing saddle on it. I have never had one of these, and after three weeks of 20-miles a day, I rather like it.
What do I do with it? I presume that there is some leather goop that needs to be periodically applied. It also has a bolt in the front, running paralell with the top tube of the bike, which would seem to adjust something like the length of the seat or the surface tension or something. What does this do?
Thanks!
What do I do with it? I presume that there is some leather goop that needs to be periodically applied. It also has a bolt in the front, running paralell with the top tube of the bike, which would seem to adjust something like the length of the seat or the surface tension or something. What does this do?
Thanks!
#2
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Brooks recommends/sells a product called Proofide for the leather. It is to be used sparingly (I do it about once a year), because over-softening the saddle will allow the leather to stretch prematurely.
Which brings me to that bolt. It is turned to tighten the saddle to account for the inevitable stretching that comes from regular and normal wear. You should not have to turn it very often. Once it is fully tightened, your saddle is worn out.
Which brings me to that bolt. It is turned to tighten the saddle to account for the inevitable stretching that comes from regular and normal wear. You should not have to turn it very often. Once it is fully tightened, your saddle is worn out.
#3
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Also, you should avoid getting your saddle wet, as riding a wet saddle can also cause it to stretch with great haste. When I Proofide my saddles, I also get the underside to help protect it from road spray.
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Most important is continue riding regularly, the saddle will fit itself to you and get better over time. Some of my Brooks saddles have not needed tightening for many years.
#6
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Originally Posted by balindamood
How do I know when I need to tighten it (the bolt, that is)??
Don't touch the bolt.
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This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
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Originally Posted by balindamood
How do I know when I need to tighten it (the bolt, that is)??
Also don't let anyone tell you to use any other product then Proofide on your Brooks saddle. Read your warranty papers, Brooks clearly tells you that using any other product will void your warranty. why would Brooks say that? because they have been making saddles for over 100 years and one would think they would know whats best to use for max life and protection...not some local yokal bike know it all.
Rivendell bicycle works and Carridice sells a saddle cover made for Brooks that can protect it from the rain which could be an issue if the the saddle will be ridden in the rain.
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So, is this Brooks saddle some that special? I bought a Cannondale with a goofy red and white saddle. It has no bolts to tighten, came with no instructions. I am guessing I'll mess it up one day by having the bike fall while leaning on something - but, I don't have to worry about its maintenance.
My Schwinn from '74 has a leather saddle. Looks the same today as it did when I purchased it (saddle is a Schwinn-approved part that I bought as an "upgrade" to that bike - a LeTour).
I am not posting to be a wise guy. I've looked at pics of those saddles - they do look nice. Just wondering if that's a toy I should consider - or would I be setting myself up for one more thing to worry about.
Caruso
My Schwinn from '74 has a leather saddle. Looks the same today as it did when I purchased it (saddle is a Schwinn-approved part that I bought as an "upgrade" to that bike - a LeTour).
I am not posting to be a wise guy. I've looked at pics of those saddles - they do look nice. Just wondering if that's a toy I should consider - or would I be setting myself up for one more thing to worry about.
Caruso