#1
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Short Nose Saddle Setback
I've been using short nose saddles for a while, mostly the Pro Stealth and the Pro Stealth Offroad. I measure setback in two places, the tip and mid point (lengthwise). As compared to the longer more traditional saddles I used before (275mm vs 240-250mm) I find that the tip measurement is well behind what I used before.
Has anyone else who uses short nose saddles found this to be the case? |
#2
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Yep different...
I measure from the back and the middle as it's a different fit on the seat post compared to traditional saddles. The short fit saddles fit more forward so measuring from the nose skewer's the fit.
__________________
Call me Greg. |
#3
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I have recently switched to short nose saddles after using pretty flat normal saddles for a long time. I've found that you have to pretty much keep the rear of the saddle in the same place as your previous one, not the front.
They tend to fit a little differently because they have that sort of flip in the back for you to push against when you're down low in the drops, so some experimentation is required. I found my saddle height dropped by 5mm and went rear ward about the same. Super comfortable, great results so far. |
#4
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#5
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It seems simple; always measure to where you sit? My short nose saddles are basically the same as my long nose saddles, minus the front ~1" lopped off. I like my shortnosed saddle, but basically I'm not convinced it isn't just fashion. It's not like I sat on the front 1" or so of my previously long-nosed saddles.
Last edited by RoosterCogset; 09-30-2024 at 08:06 PM. |
#6
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Of course its shorter. What matters is where the sitbones are. A short nose saddle is exactly that, a saddle with the nose cut off. Where you actually sit is probably more or less in the same spot, and yeah, that's harder to measure reliably than the tip, but the tip is really meaningless.
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#7
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Some say that saddle measurements (height, setback) should be made from the ergometric center of the saddle, i.e. from where the rider actually sits on the saddle. Some say the ergometric center is where the saddle is 7cm wide (for example, Prologo), and some say it is where the saddle is 8cm wide. Here is a tool to find the location where the saddle is 8cm wide:
https://secretsaddle.com/product/gebiomized-80mm-tool/ |
#8
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I laid my new short saddle on top of the old one lining up the wide part where I sit, measured the difference in length from the nose of each saddle and adjusted accordingly.
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#9
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Thanks for the replies. It seems what I found wasn't an anomaly.
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#10
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I have a prev version of the rydenbikes fit tool which locates the position from which to measure saddle height using a device similar to the one referenced above (but 70mm vs 80mm wide). That accommodates similar saddle heights regardless of the saddle design.
Last edited by teleguy57; 10-01-2024 at 12:25 PM. |
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Thanks!
__________________
Call me Greg. |
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#13
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The tool is a good idea, you could accomplish same thing with a set of inexpensive calipers set to 80mm.
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#14
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or a ruler?
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