Which Non-Brooks (or other stretched leather) Saddle
#1
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
Which Non-Brooks (or other stretched leather) Saddle
I have done a good bit of searching and reading here on the forum. The vast majority of you use Brooks or other stretched leather saddles. I'll spare you the details as to why Brooks don't work for me. What other saddles are you using for your touring or distance rides?
#2
Senior Member
Well, you can't spare us all the details. Because I think there are a few of us who use Brooks, but don't use stretched leather saddles (the Cambium line). So you might at least need to clarify whether it's Brooks you want avoid, leather you want to avoid, or both.
#3
Senior Member
#4
Senior Member
There are many .
One popular brand is Selle Anatomica .
https://selleanatomica.com
another is Rivet Cycle Works .
Rivet Cycle Works
One popular brand is Selle Anatomica .
https://selleanatomica.com
another is Rivet Cycle Works .
Rivet Cycle Works
#5
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
I may have mixed up my terminology. What I want to know is who is using what seats other than the leather ones like Brooks and Selle and the Rivet above. They don't work for me.
#6
Non omnino gravis
Well then you might as well ask what's the best color. Because any saddle recommendation thread gets almost as many different suggestions as it does replies.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
#7
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
Well then you might as well ask what's the best color. Because any saddle recommendation thread gets almost as many different suggestions as it does replies.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
#8
Non omnino gravis
It's your party, I suppose. But the odds are extremely high that you're going to gain nothing from this thread. You've been on the site for awhile, shame you never paid any attention. The "recommend me a saddle" threads come up quarterly, and they do not break new ground. Saddles are personal things. The grail saddle for one guy is the ass hatchet of another. So welcome to the internet-- don't be alarmed when you don't get the answer you want.
Likes For DrIsotope:
#9
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
It's your party, I suppose. But the odds are extremely high that you're going to gain nothing from this thread. You've been on the site for awhile, shame you never paid any attention. The "recommend me a saddle" threads come up quarterly, and they do not break new ground. Saddles are personal things. The grail saddle for one guy is the ass hatchet of another. So welcome to the internet-- don't be alarmed when you don't get the answer you want.
#10
Bad example
But in the context of butts and seats all we can do is point you to various other seat brands and let you pick one for yourself. The fact that I tour best on Terry saddles will give you no assurance that a Terry will be any better for you than a Leather hammock seat.
__________________
Keeping Seattle’s bike shops in business since 1978
Keeping Seattle’s bike shops in business since 1978
#11
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
I looked at those Terry Touring saddles a while back and had kinda let them slip my mind. They have padding which I like and a large channel which I like. Which model do you have? What saddles did you try prior to the Terry? My wife was struggling to get comfy on our tandem until I put her in a Terry.
#12
Senior Member
Ergon ST Core Touring Series
https://www.ergon-bike.com/en/product...tcore-44040000
https://www.ergon-bike.com/en/product...tcore-44040000
#13
Senior Member
Rode Brooks Professional and B17 for years on my touring bike. Just this year I changed to the Sella Italia Turbo saddle as I have had one on my daily rider since 1986. Not sure what changed, but anything over 140mm kills me now. Not sure what changed. I can do 60 miles without much issue on it.
Every butt is different. Perhaps that is why dogs and guys spend so much time looking at them checking out the differences.
Every butt is different. Perhaps that is why dogs and guys spend so much time looking at them checking out the differences.
#14
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2016
Posts: 664
Mentioned: 14 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 238 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 2 Times
in
2 Posts
Besides the Brooks I like the old Avocet Touring models. Perhaps my favorite saddle is on one of my commuting bikes and is a second-hand, no-name (or as far as I could find; I wish I could) saddle. Although I really haven't ridden that past ~20miles in a day but my butt still feels fresh after.
#15
Bad example
I looked at those Terry Touring saddles a while back and had kinda let them slip my mind. They have padding which I like and a large channel which I like. Which model do you have? What saddles did you try prior to the Terry? My wife was struggling to get comfy on our tandem until I put her in a Terry.
i also have good experiences with old Idéale saddles, but those are leather. Still, I fit those much better than Brooks saddles, leather or cambium.
__________________
Keeping Seattle’s bike shops in business since 1978
Keeping Seattle’s bike shops in business since 1978
#16
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 12,199
Bikes: (2) ti TiCycles, 2007 w/ triple and 2011 fixed, 1979 Peter Mooney, ~1983 Trek 420 now fixed and ~1973 Raleigh Carlton Competition gravel grinder
Mentioned: 121 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4346 Post(s)
Liked 3,411 Times
in
2,209 Posts
I'm another Terry fan. BUt I don't "recommend" them or any other seat. Our butts vary just as much as our faces. (No, I haven;t looked, but I have been noticing for more than a half century what seats others prefer. When I rode a very hilly near century with a rider who swore by his new Brooks Pro and who could not understand why anyone would want the narrow Selle Italia I was riding, well let's just say I had my eyes opened.
My advice - find a shop where you can return saddles after riding them long enough to know until you you find the saddle that your butt says "that one!". More and more, good shops are putting in place policies so you can do that. If you shop won't suggest to them they go on-line to the Gladys Bikes site. That shop issues "library cards" for $25 that let you take out any of the 2 dozen saddles in their library, ride it for two weeks. then either just return it, take out another or by that or another and get the $25 back. (The seat you buy will be new, in the box, not the library's.)
Until you ride a saddle, all we can offer is just words, worth exactly what you are paying us.
Ben
My advice - find a shop where you can return saddles after riding them long enough to know until you you find the saddle that your butt says "that one!". More and more, good shops are putting in place policies so you can do that. If you shop won't suggest to them they go on-line to the Gladys Bikes site. That shop issues "library cards" for $25 that let you take out any of the 2 dozen saddles in their library, ride it for two weeks. then either just return it, take out another or by that or another and get the $25 back. (The seat you buy will be new, in the box, not the library's.)
Until you ride a saddle, all we can offer is just words, worth exactly what you are paying us.
Ben
#17
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
Folks I am very well aware that saddle and short comfort is absolutely subjective. With that said, the shorts and the ISM saddles I use now, I use because someone on these forums used them and told their story here. And that is what this thread is all about. I wish I had a cycle shop around here that carried comfort/touring oriented saddles that I could put my hands on or demo, but such shops don't exist.
Ben, are you using one of these?
Search Results
Ben, are you using one of these?
Search Results
#18
Banned
Berthoud saddles has its connoisseur - fans.. Gilles Berthoud - Selles
Gilles Berthoud Saddles
https://www.peterwhitecycles.com/bersaddles.php
Gilles Berthoud Saddles
https://www.peterwhitecycles.com/bersaddles.php
#19
Callipygian Connoisseur
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 1,373
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 564 Post(s)
Liked 350 Times
in
190 Posts
I have done a good bit of searching and reading here on the forum. The vast majority of you use Brooks or other stretched leather saddles. I'll spare you the details as to why Brooks don't work for me. What other saddles are you using for your touring or distance rides?
My All-Time Favorite saddle is the Specialized Phenom -- it's like they used my ass to shape it. I highly recommend you investigate Specialized's Body Geometry saddle designs, there is something for just about everyone. You want flat? They got flat (Toupe) You want curved? They got curved (Romin) Wide? (Power) Padded? (Avatar) etc. They all feature a cutout, some of them pretty large. No, they're not cheap, but they're well built and my one warranty claim was handled quickly and painlessly (cover pulled away from an edge).
Best saddles not made of leather (IMHO).
-Kedosto
#20
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 2,923
Mentioned: 7 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 964 Post(s)
Liked 1,167 Times
in
668 Posts
I would say that the details as to why Brooks, and other stretched saddles, would be helpful in suggesting an alternative. Good luck on your search. I'm sure there is something out there for you.
#21
For The Fun of It
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Louisissippi Coast
Posts: 5,762
Bikes: Lynskey GR300, Lynskey Backroad, Litespeed T6, Lynskey MT29, Burley Duet
Mentioned: 12 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2080 Post(s)
Liked 1,567 Times
in
786 Posts
I just bought a Brooks B17. Not because I needed it, but mostly for the romance of the leather saddle. I'm not impressed. Now before anyone jumps in to turn this into a "Brooks vs Whatever" thread... stop. Please. I'm going to keep the Brooks, even though the thing is slippery as hell, and I don't know if there's a seatpost made that'll get it back far enough for me. But it is comfortable enough and maybe I'll find something to put it on someday.
My All-Time Favorite saddle is the Specialized Phenom -- it's like they used my ass to shape it. I highly recommend you investigate Specialized's Body Geometry saddle designs, there is something for just about everyone. You want flat? They got flat (Toupe) You want curved? They got curved (Romin) Wide? (Power) Padded? (Avatar) etc. They all feature a cutout, some of them pretty large. No, they're not cheap, but they're well built and my one warranty claim was handled quickly and painlessly (cover pulled away from an edge).
Best saddles not made of leather (IMHO).
-Kedosto
My All-Time Favorite saddle is the Specialized Phenom -- it's like they used my ass to shape it. I highly recommend you investigate Specialized's Body Geometry saddle designs, there is something for just about everyone. You want flat? They got flat (Toupe) You want curved? They got curved (Romin) Wide? (Power) Padded? (Avatar) etc. They all feature a cutout, some of them pretty large. No, they're not cheap, but they're well built and my one warranty claim was handled quickly and painlessly (cover pulled away from an edge).
Best saddles not made of leather (IMHO).
-Kedosto
Prior to my ISM saddles Specialized BG Sonoma saddles were the best ones I had found.
This one looks pretty good to me, but at $180 it's a bit scary to give it a whirl.
Specialized Sitero Expert Gel
https://www.specialized.com/us/en/si...=220594-131027
#22
Senior Member
While my preference is for a "stretched leather" saddle, when someone asks about an alternative; I've often suggested a Terry Liberator. Have Brooks, Anatomica and GB saddles, with GB Aravis my favorite.
#23
Partially Sane.
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Sunny Sacramento.
Posts: 3,562
Bikes: Soma Saga, pre-disc
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 971 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 640 Times
in
465 Posts
I dunno what it is about Brooks-type saddles, that doesn't work for you, but maybe you should try a "framed" leather saddle, more like the old Cinellis. I had one with nice thick leather, that was soft as anything, and breathed well. If I develop an aversion to Brooks, that's my backup plan. 🙂 Good luck.
#24
Senior Member
Aside from the Brooks that I use, I also have a cheap rebranded Velo trekking saddle that I bought about 4 years ago for about $10. I found myself even riding it for up to 30 miles in normal pants or shorts and boxers without any trouble. On that heavy city bike, I have the flat handlebars about 1" or so above the saddle and the saddle is very flat front-to-back. Although it has a cutout, I like that it's relatively flat across the sitbones, and it's narrow enough forward of that position that my legs move freely without rubbing the sides of the saddle. Sometimes with saddles that are more rounded near the sitbones, I find that it feels like saddle almost spreads them apart, which very quickly leads to pain for me. It also doesn't hurt that it's cheap and I'm less worried about a surprise rain storm than with my nicer saddles.
#25
Senior Member
Well then you might as well ask what's the best color. Because any saddle recommendation thread gets almost as many different suggestions as it does replies.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
So I'm to understand that you've tried Brooks, Selle Anatomica, and Rivet, and couldn't find an acceptable saddle? Might be something wrong with your aft section. Over 15,000 miles on SA over here.
So essentially a brooks b-17 for example only works for people who have either very shallow angled pubic rami or people with very narrow sitbones. If you have steep angled pubic rami and have wide sitbones there's no real chance a brooks or any other leather saddle will work properly.
Selle Anatomica are getting there, but they also have a narrow effective width essentially precluding them from everyone with wide sitbones. They're 165mm wide so if you take a sitbone measurement and add 4cm from center to center measurement you get the width you'd need for a suspended leather saddle so that the steel rails will not contact the outsides of your sitbones. So for a selle anatomica the maximum sitbone width center to center would be 125mm. However that's pushing it so honestly a person with 115mm wide sitbones could probably sit on a selle anatomica without issues.
There's nothing wrong in a person if their sitbones are wide. Generally sitbones can go up to 150mm or more.