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Singlespeed & Fixed Gear "I still feel that variable gears are only for people over forty-five. Isn't it better to triumph by the strength of your muscles than by the artifice of a derailer? We are getting soft...As for me, give me a fixed gear!"-- Henri Desgrange (31 January 1865 - 16 August 1940)

New bars, new problem

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Old 07-16-12 | 01:23 PM
  #26  
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Cool thanks! Lemme keep messing with adjustments to mine and see what can't be done about the discomfort. If that fails, I'll probably take you up on the offer.
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Old 07-16-12 | 08:08 PM
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Originally Posted by LessonLearned
Yeah I've been looking at those but I like the look and feel of a Brooks. I've been using Brooks for 4+ years exclusively and it's hard to pay $100+ to try something else.

Isn't there a decent saddle for $40 somewhere?
If you wanna try my Fizik let me know.
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Old 07-16-12 | 08:13 PM
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Specialized's introductory road saddle, the Riva is a very good saddle and costs $40 shipped. It's typical of modern saddle design, flat with almost no arch, firmly padded but not soft and has a cutout. It's also available in 130/143 widths as well as 155 if you can find a take-off. It's similar to the Charge Spoon but nicer.

I've been doing 200+ miles a week for the past several months on mine with no problems. I generally ride pretty evenly between tops/hoods/drops with the varying body position to match.
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Old 07-16-12 | 08:29 PM
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Originally Posted by LessonLearned
Yeah I've been looking at those but I like the look and feel of a Brooks. I've been using Brooks for 4+ years exclusively and it's hard to pay $100+ to try something else.

Isn't there a decent saddle for $40 somewhere?
Most good bike shops have a saddle demo program where you can demo several saddles for free or cheap. Just leave a valid CC number as collateral.

Originally Posted by misskaz
ETA: I do have to tilt the nose down a bit to be comfy on it, but not too much.
I've noticed quite a few ladies do that with their saddles.

The Terry Butterfly saddle comes highly recommended from a lady racer friend of mine to other ladies. She made the Me Gusta face when she was describing it to my female teammate.
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Old 07-17-12 | 06:18 AM
  #30  
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Originally Posted by jimmytango
If you wanna try my Fizik let me know.

Cool man. Will do.

Not sure though, it seems to be a day to day love hate thing. Most times my saddle doesn't bother me and I don't even think about it. But on those certain days when it does... I want nothing more than a comfortable saddle.

I think I've also come to the realization that it is never going to feel like a Lazy-Boy recliner. It's a little piece of plastic/rubber/leather jammed into your nether regions, while you workout, over bumpy terrain. There's a reasonable amount of comfort to hope for but that's it. Unless I'm wrong, and I usually am...
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Old 07-17-12 | 07:53 AM
  #31  
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I don't know, I very seldom remember I'm even on my Romin. There's no unusual pressure or weirdness, just my sit bones contacting the saddle right where they should be.
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Old 07-17-12 | 08:21 AM
  #32  
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Originally Posted by ddeadserious
I don't know, I very seldom remember I'm even on my Romin. There's no unusual pressure or weirdness, just my sit bones contacting the saddle right where they should be.
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Old 07-17-12 | 08:29 AM
  #33  
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Just saying that a properly fitting saddle doesn't constantly remind you that it's there by putting pressure on body parts that it shouldn't.
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Old 07-17-12 | 08:38 AM
  #34  
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Jokes aside, I did have a little bit of discomfort when I (essentially) lowered my bars. By that I mean installed Nitto RB021 bars. Although I did have generic drop horns on there before too, so it wasn't a huge switch. But it was enough to notice.

But now with the 125 degree 75mm stem, it feels damn near perfect.

I also tightened the nut beneath the nose of my Brooks, which tightened the leather a bit, which helped my occasional discomfort too. I think after 4 years of riding it and (occasionally) mink oiling it and whatnot, it got a little too flabby/loose. I didn't tighten that nut much, but just enough to make a difference.

Long story short, I'm just not eager to go screwing around with a saddle that's mostly working well. Start trying new saddles and changing config and maybe even dropping some dough on another saddle... I know I can get much worse. I'm not sure sure about how much better I can do though.
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Old 07-17-12 | 08:39 AM
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Originally Posted by ddeadserious
Just saying that a properly fitting saddle doesn't constantly remind you that it's there by putting pressure on body parts that it shouldn't.
Yeah it's nothing like that. I'm not thinking about it often.
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Old 07-17-12 | 09:07 AM
  #36  
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Originally Posted by carleton
I've noticed quite a few ladies do that with their saddles.

The Terry Butterfly saddle comes highly recommended from a lady racer friend of mine to other ladies. She made the Me Gusta face when she was describing it to my female teammate.
Oh sure, I have a Terry (the Liberator) on my touring bike and it is like riding on clouds. But I'm trying to avoid putting a $100+ saddle on the bike that I ride around the city and lock up in front of bars and at concert venues and stuff. I'll do it if it comes to that, and put a chain on it, but I figured I'd try out cheaper saddles first.
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