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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    2,024
    An aside on the terry warranty, it only applies to saddles ordered directly from them, not in a store. I strongly recommend ordering a brooks from wallingford. If it doesn't work it can be returned. It sounds like maybe your saddle is too narrow, as you say that you don't feel that your sit bones are bearing your weight. So instead your soft tissue is, which could be the source of your pain. Hard to diagnose this over the internet but consistent with what you describe.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    38
    Hey Girls
    I found a great article about this issue:
    http://www.faqs.org/faqs/bicycles-fa...ection-14.html
    About half way down, the author mentions bending from the waist and having her hips forward for comfort and aero.
    I think you're right that I need to try a different saddle for this bike so I can rind in the position I feel best in. Maybe a larger cut out for my perhaps over generously proportioned "soft tissue"!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    1,414
    Unfortunately finding the right saddle is a matter of trial and error. Once you've tried a few you get a better idea of specifically what you like and what you don't. My saddles, for instance, don't have cutouts, because I actually don't do well with cutouts (my bike has a fairly racy position and I end up getting bruised by the edge of the cutout). Also, I ride a fairly narrow saddle, even though I have wide hips (I've never measured my sit bones, per se, but I definitely have a woman's proportions -- narrow waist and wide hips -- I'm NOT one of those girls with boy hips that I've always been jealous of... oh well, being a fashion model was never one of my aspirations anyway ...). I've tried wider saddles that I just didn't like as well... This set-up works for me, but doesn't work for lots of people. And it's just hard to know until you try.

    One of my local bike shops has a "cast-off" saddle bin. They sell saddles from people who've immediately swapped the stock saddle on their new bikes for something else. Since the shop sells high-end bikes, some of the saddles are pretty nice and they are sold at a HUGE discount. You might look into whether any of the shops near you do anything like this.

    Also, if you can get past the embarrassment of asking, the folks at your bike shop may be able to really with saddles. Of course, it still comes down to experimenting and finding what works best for YOU, but they have seen lots of saddles and lots of riders -- and probably ridden quite a few saddles as well -- and they usually have at the very least some helpful advice!

    There are bunches of saddle threads here too, and that may be useful as well. But you can't decide academically what's going to work for you -- you ultimately have to try a few.

    Good luck!!! Saddle pain is no fun.
    Last edited by VeloVT; 10-18-2007 at 04:44 AM.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by eheckscher View Post
    Maybe a larger cut out for my perhaps over generously proportioned "soft tissue"!
    Ya, that's me too. My Terry Liberator Ti Race works well for me for that very reason, because of its large cutout, even though it's probably not wide enough for my sitz bones. Did you read that stuff last year about women having surgery because their, uh, "soft tissue" wasn't to porn star specs? There was a time - before they made the first saddles with cutouts - that I might've considered that surgery if I'd heard of it, although not for cosmetic reasons!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Albuquerque
    Posts
    127
    I have a terry saddle, and I've had great success with it. If you get it from REI, they have a 100% satisfaction guarantee, so if you don't like it after a while, you can still return it (I've heard stories of people returning dog-eaten shoes or ten year old jackets and getting brand new stuff because of the warranty!!)

    Also, I've found that tipping the saddle nose slightly down makes a world of difference for a time trial position.

 

 

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