On my brooks finesse, I found the sweet spot by leveling the nose (so the back is higher but I don't slip) and lowering it a tad. I think saddle height is higher on squishy saddles since, well, they squish!
On my brooks finesse, I found the sweet spot by leveling the nose (so the back is higher but I don't slip) and lowering it a tad. I think saddle height is higher on squishy saddles since, well, they squish!
B67 regular here. (not "S" for "short")
Levelled the noses on both of mine. The cantle plate ends up looking a bit higher, but don't let that fool you. Brooks are meant to start with a level nose rather than levelling the whole saddle.
I agree with the other posts, if your current saddle is so narrow that you only have one perch and tend to come off it and it feels very hard; it kinda sounds like you might be perching on the cantle plate rather than putting your sit bones onto the suspended leather forward and medial of the cantle plate. (where the saddle is narrower)
Maybe see if you can try a wider Brooks borrowed from a friend or bike shop, so you can compare?
(whether you want a "short" or not is up to you. I prefer long noses just because I like to control the bike with my legs and have room to scoot around during long rides.)
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Well, kayandallie's loss is my gain ... I bought her Pro S to replace the B-17S on my new mixte, and wow, is it a beauty. It's the same size as the B-17S but seems to have a touch more adjustability so I am hoping it will improve the fit. I'm still not sure I'm sold on the need for a shorter saddle for women, but I have the men's version of this saddle and it frankly looks ridiculous on the mixte -- it is huge and out of proportion to the size of the bike. It didn't work for me on my road bike (I need more setback than it allows me) so I have given it to my husband and ordered him to build a bike around it so he'll have one as cute as my mixte.
(What? It's as good a reason as any other to build a new bike. Someday remind me to tell you about the time I bought him a bunch of upgraded Shimano parts for his old road bike, and that led to a domino effect that resulted in two entirely new bikes, both of which are all Campy and apparently my fault for buying the Shimano stuff.)