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Old 06-29-18 | 01:57 PM
  #17  
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livedarklions
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From: New England

Bikes: Serotta Atlanta; 1994 Specialized Allez Pro; Giant OCR A1; SOMA Double Cross Disc; 2022 Allez Elite mit der SRAM

Originally Posted by zaxmalloy
There is no foolproof 'test' IMHO. Fortunately local bike shops often have tester programs and that's about as close as you can come. After that comes experience, clothing choices, and ultimately types of bikes...

On my road bike I have the upgraded WTB Volt (found by using the test program at my LBS with several different saddles); on my go anywhere Salsa Vaya is a Brooks B17; and on my Specialized Fatboy the stock saddle that came with it. On my garage sale Raleigh C-50 is some sort of Bontrager saddle that's long out of production. They all work....but I'm not sure one would work on all bikes.

I may put the standard Volt that came on the Vaya on the Fatboy. Or not.

Of all of them, the Brooks is the most comfortable now, and by a long shot, but it sure would not have 'tested' well...the good thing about a Brooks though is if you need to resell it, you can probably get most of what you paid for it.

To be honest, I don't remember the last time I had a leather saddle (it's definitely been decades). My butt does not appear to be picky, and I just don't see (for myself) the use of making myself miserable during a breaking-in period.

I still think my test is foolproof way to reject bad saddles in that any problems are likely to become obvious by 100 miles. Whether it will also reject saddles that would be fine in the long-run is a different question. I don't think there could be a foolproof way of discovering the absolutely best saddle for any rider, there's just too many choices and variables.

Interesting point about bike/saddle match.
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