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  1. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    I'm the only one allowed to whine
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    10,557
    Quote Originally Posted by Veronica View Post
    But if Grits' sit bones measure 152 mm won't she have issues with too wide of a saddle?

    Veronica
    As I said, it's the ultimate wide and T-shaped saddle, she said she didn't know of one wider and more t-shaped than what she had. Knowledge is power. At least she knows it exists now. The B67/B68 is the Jolly Green Giant of wide and T-shape. There are many others. She asked for suggestions. C'mon, kids, chip in with some more saddle names!

    You do not insert a saddle. You perch ON it. Perching on something too wide should not be a problem. I can perch my sit bones on the center of a bench and the added width doesn't irritate me. Damm bench is a good 3 feet too wide on either side.

    People forget the hip joint is FORWARD of the ischial tuberosities. If there is more saddle to the sides of the tuberosities it doesn't matter. It's wasted space, but it doesn't interfere with anything.

    However, if there is too much saddle in front of the tuberosites (where the transition is, the ol' pear vs. T) where the hip joint needs room to move, yeah, BIG problem!

    Looking at Trek420's Selle Italia saddle, that sucker is mighty pear-shaped compared to my B68 right next to it. The angles of her pubic rami and hip joints are happy with that pear, which would kill me (if they made it wide enough for me in the first place). I get chafing exactly as Grits describes when I ride a Serfas Niva. It is one of the very few saddles out there that is wide enough for me, but it is too pear shaped. My Brooks is T shaped (and a bit wider), and all is good.

    In Grits' case, it's more likely the saddle is too pear shaped than that it is too narrow.

    Chafing where the butt meets the leg is the hip motion dragging the skin along the saddle forward of the sit bones.

    The ischial tuberosities don't move, that's why we sit on them.

    Hip joints do move, that's why saddles get narrow, to get out of the way. If the saddle doesn't get narrow fast enough, it gets in the way and the moving femur drags tissue against the saddle transition zone.

    LBS and saddle companies are starting to get the idea about sit bone width. I have faith that soon pear/T will spring to the forefront of the minds of shop clerks when a woman walks in with a chafing problem.

    Bits chafe when they need to move and something gets in their way. Bits hurt and go numb when they are getting squished.

    If I ever design saddles, I think I'll name my company "Bits"....
    Last edited by KnottedYet; 06-21-2010 at 03:24 PM.
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