Originally Posted by
79pmooney
Hmmm, hundreds of dollars for the visit to the professional and the needed X-rays or other scans vs 3 minutes with the wrench for the seatpin, a small twist, going for a ride with that wrench in a pocket ...
Yes, maybe the OP will be incapacitated years from now from this ill chosen cheap fix for comfort. (I'm 71 and should be cringing that in the next 20 years ago, a similar ailment may strike me. I did what I am suggesting.) I bet the vast majority of the askew seat riders also did not seek out professional help. Health crisis in the making?
If nothing else, playing with the twisted seat and perhaps a few other seats may give the OP more information to give that professional.
Your first response to the OP was that perhaps there was a leg length discrepancy. And the OP thought he had a sit bone discrepancy.
If this was just a thread about finding a comfortable saddle height, I wouldn't be suggestiing they spend hundreds of dollars to find out why they have a leg length issue or find out for a fact that there is a sit bone height difference. Not to mention another seems to think that I shouldn't have questioned the OP's self diagnosis.
Some that think they have a leg length issue really don't have a physical difference in their leg bone lengths. It's from other things, sometimes injury or simply bad posture habits that have them holding their hips askew and they don't realize it.
For me, it'd be money well spent to know for certain one way or the other. If you think that's a waste of money, then I'm okay with that. However I don't think that you should insist everyone else have the same view as you. Or fault others for simply having a different view.