T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1111.1 | Sorry about the missing letters | BLKWDO::HUFFAKER | | Sun Apr 16 1989 03:11 | 6 |
| Sorry about that! (should be brooks saddles). My phone line was
apparently bad and I have some missing characters. The first line
should read "I really perfer the brooks saddle....."
thanks
Mike
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1111.2 | Costly, but worth it, in the end. | ATLS15::DIAL_B | Zen Yuppie | Mon Apr 17 1989 10:33 | 16 |
| I like Brooks saddles as well, but you pay dearly! It took about
two years of riding (I don't know how many miles, a lot!) to break
mine in. I used proof hide on it about once a week, but didn't
do anything else. I bought the saddle (and the bike it's on) in
1975. I suspect that the newer high-tech saddles being sold now
won't be usable in 2003! The Brooks is quite comfortable now, as
the leather has molded itself to my shape.
The neatsfoot oil soak sounds like a good idea, and I've seen it
recemmended before. Be sure to wear shorts you don't care about
during the first few hundred miles, while all that nice black dye
is wearing off! The proof hide is good for maintainance of the
leather, but if you don't like the smell, any good leather conditioner
is probably fine.
Good luck!
Barry
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1111.3 | if I had a hammer ... | AKOV75::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Wed Apr 19 1989 12:09 | 10 |
|
RE the rubber mallet
I posted a note out here some time ago about this technique. I use a
combination of neatsfoot and a rubber mallet for a couple of nights.
When you see how much effort it takes to soften the leather even with a
mallet, you'll be glad you didn't use your rear end.
After you get it soft you can tighten up on the leather and let it out
slowly so it assumes the shape of your rear.
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1111.4 | HARDER THAN PLASTIC? | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Fri Apr 21 1989 07:27 | 14 |
| I was seriously thinking about a Brooks saddle too. I've had leather
saddles before, but right now I'm running on a Vetta III. This guy
is no softy!
It seems the leather saddles I've had before didn't really take
that long to break in (a summer). And they weren't any stiffer/
harder than a regular racing saddle. The difference being the regular
racing saddles (plastic form with vinyl or suede stretched over
it) never soften up.
Is Brooks an exception to leather. Would I be experiencing a harder
saddle for a while?
Chip
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1111.5 | THOSE BRASS RIVETS ARE HARD | AKOV11::FULLER | | Fri Apr 21 1989 09:23 | 7 |
| I've tried leather saddles in years past but have found one problem
even with a broken in saddle. When I climb, I tend to move back
on my saddle, this seats me on the brass rivets, not exactly
comfortable. Concor and similar saddles provide cushioning on the
back of the saddle.
steve
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1111.6 | Plastic and rivets | BLKWDO::HUFFAKER | | Fri Apr 21 1989 12:16 | 17 |
| re: .4
I think it depends on a relative pain index. On a brand new Brooks I
dont usually notice a problem until after ~4 hours "in the saddle" but
on one of my older, broken in saddles it is comfortable (sometimes
better than a chair) for the same period of time. I had a concor and
liked it for shorter(1-3 hour) fast rides. The plastic saddles tend
to show me no mercy on long, uphill grades at the end of a century
ride. Out here in Arizona we seem to be climbing most of the time.
re: .5
Yes, I found that the rivets do exist! what is interesting is that if
there is the slightest raised edge I tend to find it fast. On those I
peen the edge over. I usually have had to do this on each saddle on
one or two rivets during the break in process. I wonder if this is a
problem on the Ideale saddles with the raised, smaller rivets.
mike
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1111.7 | how do you break it in? | CSMADM::SCHWABE | | Fri Apr 21 1989 13:37 | 17 |
|
What is the recommended procedure for breaking in a leather saddle?
I have a Brooks professional that came as standard equipment on an
old "classic" Motobecane Grand Record. I've got some of that Brooks
Proofhide and made an application once on the bottom of the saddle, but some
9 years later I swear that saddle is as hard as it was on day one.
Should anything be done with that adjusting nut on the front of
the saddle?
I love the classic look of the Brooks but unless it conforms to
my butt pretty soon I'm afraid I'll be buying one of those plastic
padded saddles.
DS
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1111.8 | Softening Leather Saddles | BUFFER::ALUSIC | | Fri Apr 21 1989 14:44 | 16 |
| I love the Brooks Leather saddles as well. They used to make a womans
saddle, I'd assume they still do.
Back when I first bought mine, 1975, I broke them in by soaking them in
Neatsfoot oil for a couple of days, then wrapped it in a folded bath
towel to keep it from getting scratched and "beat" it with a softball
bat until it was soft. You don't have to hit it very hard with the
bat. I liked the bat idea, read about it someplace, because when I
tried useing a hammer, I just seemed to over stress very small areas
the size of the hammer head. With the bat, much larger areas were
softened with each blow.
Do you know where I can order a womans Brooks leather? I am not
satisfied with my Vetta. Even with the Spenco blaa, blaa, blaa.
\VA
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1111.9 | a mallet, not a hammer | AKOV88::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Fri Apr 21 1989 15:46 | 12 |
|
> use a bat
As I mentioned in .3, you can use a big rubber mallet instead of a bat.
It contacts a large area.
> the adjusting nut
Once you have it softened with a mallet, adjust the nut so you get
a reasonable amount of play in it without loosing support. As you
ride and the seat takes shape you can loosen the nut more and allow
the leather to conform to your rear.
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1111.10 | Fortunately its not needed very often... | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Fri Apr 21 1989 20:25 | 26 |
| re < Note 1111.5 by AKOV11::FULLER >
> -< THOSE BRASS RIVETS ARE HARD >-
> I've tried leather saddles in years past but have found one problem
> even with a broken in saddle. When I climb, I tend to move back
> on my saddle, this seats me on the brass rivets, not exactly
> comfortable. Concor and similar saddles provide cushioning on the
> back of the saddle.
> steve
Gee, I never saw you do THAT !
"Stand up and run on the pedals" is the style I remember you
for Steve:-^)
re: Breaking in a Brookes; SWEAT is the best leather softener I
know. Keep the plastic saddle that came with the bike, put it back on
when you trade/sell it. Swap the REAL saddle from bike to bike, one
should last a lifetime.
R
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