I have a brown b67 on the tandem and a black b67 on the Bianchi.Quote:
Originally Posted by WrensMom
how is This not cool??:cool:
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I have a brown b67 on the tandem and a black b67 on the Bianchi.Quote:
Originally Posted by WrensMom
how is This not cool??:cool:
I have the same saddle on my Kona that Mimi has, except mine has black springs. Unless you're really looking, the black springs are pretty unnoticable.
My sit bones are nearly 180 mm outside edge to outside edge. If the goal is to get the sitz in the center of the "cheek" of each side of the seat, there is no way I could do that on any of the smaller saddles, I would just be perched on the very edges of the saddle.
Lemme tell ya, it is SO comfy to have the bones supported completely! I can't believe it! And as the hard leather is starting to soften, it just gets better. From what I've gathered, the leather never softens to the point you get the "gel seat syndrome".
My next bike (steel tourer) will also have a Brooks. Probably another B67 or a B72.
Quote:
Originally Posted by KnottedYet
warning! My husband rode his b17 on a 24 hour bike ride. it rained for many hours that day. the seat is no longer shaped like a shovel, it is now shaped like
a tent. it fits exactly to the crack of his butt!
so, if it's raining and you are on a 24 hour bike ride, you CAN ruin your brooks leather saddle.
but of course, he bought a new one!
Hmmm...I measured mine center to center at 159mm. If I went outside edge to outside edge, they would approach what yours are. Maybe this explains part of my problem. I have a feeling that the B67 is in my future, and spring-mockers be damned:p I wonder if there is any correlation between the wide sit bones and the fact that the pushing stage of labor with my daughter only lasted 15 minutes--it would be comforting to know that the wide bones are good for something, since they are obviously a PITA in regards to finding a bike saddle!:rolleyes:Quote:
My sit bones are nearly 180 mm outside edge to outside edge. If the goal is to get the sitz in the center of the "cheek" of each side of the seat, there is no way I could do that on any of the smaller saddles, I would just be perched on the very edges of the saddle.
Mimi--Your bike is definitely cool:cool: ! Thanks for posting the pic so I can see how mine would look with a B67 on it. So how did you attach your seat wedge bag--to the springs?
wedge bag attachs to seat post and to two little dealys on the back of the saddle. i don't know what they are called. Slots?Quote:
Originally Posted by WrensMom
Cool. I just got a wedge bag I really like from the Bianchi website to match the bike. It even has a built-in light. My DH thinks it is goofy, but he is a man, what does he know:rolleyes:
oh, please show me the link! I can't get one, but i'd like to get it.Quote:
Originally Posted by WrensMom
oh nevermind, i found it. You're right it is REALLY nice!!
Glad you found it:) We are just going to have to meet up one of these days and ride our bikes together:D Esp if we have matching saddles and wedge bags LOL. I got the celeste color bottle racks and bottles (like yours also!) from that site too. The shipping was really reasonable and it came quickly.
MimitabbyQuote:
Originally Posted by mimitabby
Did he use the seat cover? Inquiring minds need to know. :confused:
Quill
you mean while he was riding?? NO.Quote:
Originally Posted by Quillfred
but he didn't even own the seat cover back then.
He had no idea that the leather saddle could get completely wet in 24 hours at body temperature and bathing conditions.
I'm thinking that even with a cover, this would have happened.
A sane person would have stayed home. lol
I have ordered a B17S from Bill at www.wallbike.com. It should ship on Monday and I'll get it by the end of next week.
I'm curious to see how this will work for me -- my sit bones are fine on my other saddles, but I notice slight discomfort in the front.
I think I'm going to try the saddle on my mountain bike (which I ride on weekdays for about an hour a day on the trails after work) and on my road bike (weekend warrior).
If all goes well, I'll probably get another one.
I can't wait to check it out!
-- Melissa
PS Here are my "burning questions":
1. Will it be comfortable? I realize that some break in time may be necessary.
2. Will it look out of place on my road bike (Trek 5200 WSD)? (If it's comfortable, who really cares?)
3. Will I like it better on one bike than the other?
4. How hard will it be to find the seat post settings with the new saddle?
5. Is the uniquely conforming leather saddle thing all it's cracked up to be?
6. How does this work if your seat bones are kind of narrow?
I know, I probably over think these things. :o
Do you think it looks out of place on my Bianchi? (see about 8 posts up)Quote:
Originally Posted by melissam
it took me about 3 tries to get the post set up just right.
at first you will be surprised because it is HARD. be sure to treat the saddle with the leather treatment.
then you will notice 10-20 miles down the road that it's still hard but you're not sore.
then you will notice 30-50 miles down the road that this is the best saddle you've ever sat on.
I have one on each of my bikes.
Mimitabby,
Actually, it looks quite good on your Bianchi! Your pic was one of the factors in my deciding to give the Brooks a try, so thanks for posting it!
The thing is, though, that I associate Bianchis with traditional cycling, and I also associate Brooks with traditional cycling. Treks in carbon fiber, not so much. (I know, I'm weird.)
Yep, I'm definitely overthinking all this.
Oh, and thanks for the mileage guideance. I'll reserve my opinion until I've put about 50 or so good miles on her.
-- Melissa
PS I have a very traditional 20+ year old Bianchi: steel framed with friction shifters on the downtube and a double chainring. I love it! I'd probably still be riding it if I could have figured out a way to convert to a triple chainring without spending a gazillion dollars.
I think they are so good that I put a brooks on all three of my bikes. I want a 4th bike so I can try the B67.