change Romin to Romin
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2009
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From: Further North than U
Bikes: Spec Roubaix, three Fisher Montare, two Pugs
change Romin to Romin
My Romin 143 Comp Gel got a crack in it. Interestingly I only learned about it because I wrongly thought the squeaking was coming from it. But it was cracked. I called Specialized and they were happy to send a replacement. They even said "sure" to my request to change over to a White 155 Evo.
What an incredible difference. I have one other 155 saddle that I like, but not really any better than some of my 143 saddles. But this 155 Romin Evo is an incredible fit.
The point I want to make is that if you are not entirely satisfied with your saddle, consider trying another size. In my case the change in size made a huge difference in comfort.
What an incredible difference. I have one other 155 saddle that I like, but not really any better than some of my 143 saddles. But this 155 Romin Evo is an incredible fit.
The point I want to make is that if you are not entirely satisfied with your saddle, consider trying another size. In my case the change in size made a huge difference in comfort.
#4
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How big (or small) are you fellas? My bike came with a 143 Romin and I've been giving serious thought to swapping to a Romin EVO. I've read many times where Romin users have gone from a 143 to a 155 and loved it. I know everyone is different but I'm a med/large fella at 6' 170lbs....
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
#5
It do, but it don't.
Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 310
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From: Bloomington, IL
How big (or small) are you fellas? My bike came with a 143 Romin and I've been giving serious thought to swapping to a Romin EVO. I've read many times where Romin users have gone from a 143 to a 155 and loved it. I know everyone is different but I'm a med/large fella at 6' 170lbs....
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
#6
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Joined: Jun 2013
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pretty easy to measure your sit bones at home. i put a folded up towel on a wooden chair (coffee table might work too) and put foil over it. sat down on the foil and my sit bones leave a nice indentation. measure the distance in mm between the indentations and you've got your sit bone measurement. i did it 3 times and took an average just to be sure i didnt screw it up the first time.
#7
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Joined: Jul 2012
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From: Atlanta GA
Bikes: '13 Spech Roubaix SL4 Expert
I have a romin evo gel comp in 155. Really like it but it is white and now my bike is themed black. It is also heavy at 235gr I believe... Now I have a toupe expert in 155mm and while not as comfortable it looks better and weights a whoping 50 grams less!!!
. I think I want either a romin pro or S works but I feel like I am missing on other options like Fizik and selle italia. I just dont know how they measure sit bones and such.
Anybody have an idea? Sorry if I am derrailing the thread some.
. I think I want either a romin pro or S works but I feel like I am missing on other options like Fizik and selle italia. I just dont know how they measure sit bones and such.Anybody have an idea? Sorry if I am derrailing the thread some.
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#8
It do, but it don't.
Joined: Apr 2013
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From: Bloomington, IL
one thing i forgot to add...measure the indentations from the center of each, not the edges.
#11
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Bikes: 2012 BMC SLR01, 2012 Yeti ASR5, 2013 Trek Crockett
I love my Romin 155. For some reason that saddle fits alot of people very well. My fitter gets alot of people to switch to that seat after they demo one. In his experience more people fit the regular Romin better than the EVO.
#12
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Joined: Jun 2008
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From: Northern VA
Bikes: Moots Vamoots, Colnago C60, Santa Cruz Stigmata CC, and too many other bikes I don't ride
I believe, for the same sit bone width, you may need different size Specialized saddles. For example, I am 143 for Toupe, but 155 for Romin and Romin EVO. I made the mistake of assuming I need the same width when I moved from Toupe to Romin and then to Romin EVO; after I switched to the 155mm, I found the difference is huge. I can now sit properly in and "push off" the saddle a lot better. YMMV.
#13
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Joined: Dec 2009
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From: Houston, TX
Bikes: 1990 Romic Reynolds 531 custom build, Merlin Works CR Ti custom build, super light Workswell 066 custom build
Poster after poster continually say this or that brand and model saddle is the "bomb". Everybody should be riding it. But it isn't about brand and model (at least not completely). It is to a very high degree about width. Like OP and others are just finding out. As I have said before, there used to be an adjustable width saddle that could be used permanently or just to learn what width was required. Kind of like an adjustable stem. (Not the Easy Seat brand with no nose in front) If bike shops would keep some of those as "testers", they wouldn't have to take back and exchange so many barely used saddles. They could give out the variable width tester on loan for a deposit. Let the customer find his preferred width and then take back the tester and apply the deposit to the required width saddle of customer's choice. I guarantee the brand and model would be much less important if the width were always determined this way first.
#14
I believe, for the same sit bone width, you may need different size Specialized saddles. For example, I am 143 for Toupe, but 155 for Romin and Romin EVO. I made the mistake of assuming I need the same width when I moved from Toupe to Romin and then to Romin EVO; after I switched to the 155mm, I found the difference is huge. I can now sit properly in and "push off" the saddle a lot better. YMMV.
For those of you measuring at home, keep in mind that your sit bone width <> saddle width. if I recall correctly, the specialized guy measured my sit bones at 135mm, which put me between the 143 and 155 widths for saddles. Maybe specialized has a table on line somewhere, I'm not sure.
I tried a 143 Toupe and hated it... immediately. I tried a 155 romin evo and still love it. There are not many saddles out there for racing bikes that are wider than 143, though.
Is the regular romin a different shape? The Evo has *slightly* more padding but I'm not aware of any other differences.
#15
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Joined: Jun 2009
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From: Boone, North Carolina
Bikes: 2009 Cannondale CAAD9-6 2014 Trek Domaine 5.9
pretty easy to measure your sit bones at home. i put a folded up towel on a wooden chair (coffee table might work too) and put foil over it. sat down on the foil and my sit bones leave a nice indentation. measure the distance in mm between the indentations and you've got your sit bone measurement. i did it 3 times and took an average just to be sure i didnt screw it up the first time.
#16
Redefining Lazy
Joined: Apr 2008
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From: North Metro, MN
Bikes: 2013 Cannondale Synapse 5 105, 2013 Giant Escape 3
Good luck.
S
#17
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From: Atlanta GA
Bikes: '13 Spech Roubaix SL4 Expert
different saddles are shaped different for different purposes as well, I believe. I like my toupe but with flatter surface it might be putting more stress on my sitbones. I do think it provides more stability for extended periods of big power outputs. I think the Romin is more short sprints based, when there is a lot of body movement not necessarily on the saddle but out of it... Or I might just be talking out of my derriere.
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#18
can I has barspinz?
Joined: Apr 2009
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+1 - make sure you demo different saddles!
For those of you measuring at home, keep in mind that your sit bone width <> saddle width. if I recall correctly, the specialized guy measured my sit bones at 135mm, which put me between the 143 and 155 widths for saddles. Maybe specialized has a table on line somewhere, I'm not sure.
I tried a 143 Toupe and hated it... immediately. I tried a 155 romin evo and still love it. There are not many saddles out there for racing bikes that are wider than 143, though.
Is the regular romin a different shape? The Evo has *slightly* more padding but I'm not aware of any other differences.
For those of you measuring at home, keep in mind that your sit bone width <> saddle width. if I recall correctly, the specialized guy measured my sit bones at 135mm, which put me between the 143 and 155 widths for saddles. Maybe specialized has a table on line somewhere, I'm not sure.
I tried a 143 Toupe and hated it... immediately. I tried a 155 romin evo and still love it. There are not many saddles out there for racing bikes that are wider than 143, though.
Is the regular romin a different shape? The Evo has *slightly* more padding but I'm not aware of any other differences.
Evo nose drops down more and is a bit thinner in profile than the regular. Regular romin for me. Love it.
#19
How big (or small) are you fellas? My bike came with a 143 Romin and I've been giving serious thought to swapping to a Romin EVO. I've read many times where Romin users have gone from a 143 to a 155 and loved it. I know everyone is different but I'm a med/large fella at 6' 170lbs....
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
I guess I could go get measured but figuring I won't be buying a saddle at a LBS, I'd feel bad wasting their time.
#20
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Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 496
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From: Madison, WI
Bikes: Yes, I ride an aluminum Trek!
I recently switched from an Arione VS to a Romin Evo Gel in 155. I tried a Toupe in 143 and found it painful even though it has a flatter profile similar to the Arione. Still getting used to the Romin, but looks like it's going to work. Noticed my behind likes it level (tail to nose) to slightly elevated nose. For some reason I'm also very sensitive to fore/aft, level, and height adjustments with this saddle. Only thing I don't like is that I could "move around" a lot easier on the Arione than on the Romin, but I guess I'm getting used to that.
#21
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Joined: May 2009
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pretty easy to measure your sit bones at home. i put a folded up towel on a wooden chair (coffee table might work too) and put foil over it. sat down on the foil and my sit bones leave a nice indentation. measure the distance in mm between the indentations and you've got your sit bone measurement. i did it 3 times and took an average just to be sure i didnt screw it up the first time.
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