It is probably true that the Look 585 in question does not have enough setback. But if I used a saddle with longer rails they'd probably be more centered on the rails and the clamp. But for the money I have paid for my 3 Looks combined I could not afford a single bike from one of the big dog builders here with the exception of the one I have from Zank and his prices now are more in line with reality than they were when I ordered mine.
If the Looks couldn't be made to work I wouldn't buy them. But they work for me with one of the only saddles which works for me for a 4 hour ride with a reasonable seatpost and they look good to boot. But that's not what it's about. It really is just about where the saddle needs to be and I can achieve that with an XL Look 585, a Campagnolo Record post and a Turbomatic saddle. Barely.
The three Look frames I have cost me a total of less than $2700, so part of my cheapness comes out. If I could afford a Crumpton which kept the rails centered I might pull the trigger on that. But I can't.
Long live eBay and the V-Salon Classifieds. In the end we're all just getting by with what works.
I can't believe I got sucked into this discussion. Where's that 11-foot pole again?
BTW, how's this for throwing fuel to the fire - an adjustable setback seatpost. With the saddle slammed all the way back.
Dazza; it has nothing to do with the frame or geo. I am only refering to where the sweetspot is on that specific saddle. No more no less, rails are way back on the Turbo and sweetspot is not far rear of rail center. All saddles fit/sit differently. Sweetspot for an SMP for me is dead center of rail but sweetspot on a Turbomatic is slammed back on the rails. My pelvis/sit bones are on the sweetspots of both saddles but rail position on seatpost/seats are totally different. See where I'm coming from?
Cheers Dazza
The rock star is dying. And it's a small tragedy. Rock stars have blogs now. I have no use for that kind of rock star.
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Darrell Llewellyn McCulloch
I blame evil MTB's.... there were no inline seatposts and sloping top tubes 'til those dirty muthas came along.
...they're now infiltrating us with discs.......notice those wider Velocity/Hed rims?????
... we'll all be sessioning down mountains soon, mark my words (well not so much in DC but you get my point)
Last edited by e-RICHIE; 12-09-2010 at 01:17 AM.
Rod Moses of Interloc Racing was probably the first. He fabbed one up for Paul Thomasberg because Paul kept on breaking the bolt on his traditional styles. The hot rumor is the Syncros guys were rolling down I5 and stopped to see Rod. (IRD used to be in Selma, OR). They promptly liked the idea and went for it. Of course the truth is that there were probably a ton of other people with the same/similar idea round about the same time. See Ringle, USE, Cunningham and a bunch more.
maybe i am missing something, but why the discourtesy/rudeness to a particular individual on a public forum ?
Anywho, loving this thread and it will become wiki.
FODMFB (friend of DouglasMotherFuckingBrooks).
Josh Simonds
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Vsalon Fromage De Tête
sorry, i mite hv missed the context, to me from reading cycling forums dbrk is not a jules winnfield type going around carrying a obmf wallet , but rather a dignified professor into toei bikes and sanskrit, i felt it was discourteous calling him DMFgB
Hey Dazza,
To make these saddles even more confusing, I own three of them and the rails have a variance of .5 to 1cm in relation from tip to tail of the saddles! Meaning; if you center them all each in this case will be .5 to 1cm. further forward of the other. So even slammed some saddle of the same model dont go back as far as the others. I love stuff like this in a twisted way, because folks go crazy over custom geo and measure to the mm. and a builder put's his heart and soul into a bike but the new saddle the customer puchased which happens to be the same as what he/she may use puts them in a totally different spot! Unfortuatley I bet the builder gets the blame for this sometimes when the owner swears the bike rides funky....
You guys have all got to be kidding. This is kind of funny.
Okay, my .02. First of all, the bike has to fit the rider. Biomechanically speaking, it has to allow him/her to put the power to the pedals and not cause stress and the resulting injuries.Where the saddle is placed is an individual need. Whether a setback or straight post is used really doesn't matter that much, as long as it is correct for the rider's fit.
As far as beauty is concerned. It's a personal preference whether that seatpost is straight or setback. It's an opinion and you can't say someone else's opinion is wrong. You are welcome to prefer a setback (or a straight) post. it's no skin off my back, folks.
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