What's the difference between these two (besides $40 and a few grams)? I'm getting closer to taking the plunge and trying a new saddle...
What's the difference between these two (besides $40 and a few grams)? I'm getting closer to taking the plunge and trying a new saddle...
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I know nothing about the Ruby. I would warn you that the Alias (male counterpart to the Jett) has very hard, abrupt edges. BF has the Alias and I can ride it but don't love it (and he doesn't either actually).
The information about the Alias sounds like it applies to the old version. It has been completely redesigned for 2008. If you are thinking about this saddle, I would make sure you are getting the 2008 version without the seams & the hard edges.
I have both of these saddles, and there is quite a difference between them in terms of feel. They both look dead flat, but the Ruby seems flatter, the Jett seems to have a little bit of dip to it. The padding on the Jett is all foam, while the Ruby has gel. They are both very firm, but there seems to be more padding to the Jett. The Ruby is completely smooth, so with slick shorts I move around on it more than I do on the Jett. In the mens' equivalents, I believe the Jett is the Alias and the Ruby is the Toupe. The cut-out on both is excellent, there are no sharp edges or seams to irritate and the shape of the hourglass works well for relief. The mens' cut-out is thinner & straight, no hourglass shape. I would not want to ride the mens' versions.
If possible, I would have the shop set up both for you to sit on before you decide. It is a matter of personal preference which one might feel more comfortable. Specialized offers a comfort guarantee on their saddles, so trying one should be relatively low-risk.
I am pretty sure you are correct about the ruby being the equivalent to the Toupe and the Jett to the Alias.
I ride on the Toupe and I love it- it is thin, and has flex to it.
I never thought I would want to ride it, I thought when I got the new bike I would be switching it out after the first ride. But nope, first ride never noticed it was there! 2nd ride was a 100 miler and still never noticed it! The only time I notice it is when I am on the trainer, and I am pretty sure that is just because I don't have the incline adjusted to the right spot.
So this just proves to each her own and go try them!! Find a specialized dealer and see if they will let you try! I would try the women's and the men's. You never know what might work the best for you![]()
I just bought a Ruby s-works bike and LOVE the specialized saddle. It's the best I've ever ridden and I'm been riding for ....20 some years! If you go to a shop that sells specialized they will measure your butt (NOT as bad as it sounds) and then you get the correct size. All you do is sit on a memory foam pad, hop up and they quickly take the measurement.
![]()
I did a little experiment today.
Most of the manufacturers tell you to measure from the center of your sit-bone prints, where Knott tells us to measure from the outsides.
Here's why Knott is right (I believed her anyway! the experiment was just out of curiosity!) and why I now KNOW I need a wider saddle.
I made another butt print sitting on a piece of paper, on my Pilates mat, on a hard plastic stool, and this time I circled the indentations so I'd have a semi-permanent record. The deepest part of the indentations was over an inch in diameter on each side, not sure how much of that is my real bones and how much is, um, adipose tissue
Then I laid the piece of paper on my Liberator.The circles are mostly beyond where the saddle starts to slope to the outsides. Besides that, I think the combination of my thunder thighs and the saddle's wide-ish nose forces me forward of the widest part of it.
I'm hoping the Specialized saddle has a somewhat flatter profile, besides being a little bit wider and more T-shaped. Unfortunately all the LBS has in stock in a 155 is a Lithia which I'm afraid will be too squishy. Didn't make it up there today, as it's 30 miles away, it rained off and on, I'm trying NOT to catch a terrible cold that's going around, and I'm TWO for the duration until DH gets home (which may be another week). Maybe tomorrow.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Wow, that must be some bike. I notice you are a little new to posting here on TE...please consider starting a new thread to introduce yourself and let us get a look at that bike!(Or, direct me to any posts where you have already done that...wow, an S-works! OK, OK so we want to get to know you, too...it is just not very often that someone has an S-works, and I would love to see yours!)
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury