I just installed my fourth new SA. In my last comment I neglected to say, I had 
to do some prep work on my last saddle. I took coarse sandpaper and sanded down 
the edges to provide a rounded edge. I also carefully peened down the edge of 
the name plate so it won't tear up my shorts. Some mink oil on the edges of the 
leather fixes the destruction. I found the key to setting up mine is to set the 
nose a little high, and LIGHT tension. I haven't over stretched mine.... In my 
thirty years of riding, this is the most comfortable saddle I have tried. With 
beausage, they looks great. 
Claytonious QBend 
 

    On Tuesday, December 6, 2016 6:25 AM, ian m <darkgizz...@gmail.com> wrote:
 

 The main take-away if you want to use a SA saddle is that it is *supposed* to 
sag. It's part of the design, not a flaw. If you are more interested in the 
saddle looking a certain way than feeling a certain way you will not be happy 
with these saddles. The cut-out is a life changer
Also I don't know if it was mentioned but the woman who started Rivet used to 
run SA. I purchased my first SA after speaking with her at a bike expo in SF. 
Would highly recommend buying Rivet due to her involvement, even though I don't 
own one.

On Tuesday, December 6, 2016 at 9:14:35 AM UTC-5, ian m wrote:
I am honestly surprised people have managed to stretch the SA leather past the 
length of the tension bolt. I have a Titanico (original model before T, X, &c.) 
I've had for about 5 years. Put countless miles on it, rode it on a week long 
tour, commuted on it, you name it. Still going strong. I bought a second about 
3 years ago (T model) and like the leather more than on the original. Haven't 
moved the tension bolt past halfway for either.
I'm guessing the combination of a less stiff leather than the Brooks and the 
looser hammocking shape of the saddle makes the SA work better with specific 
body shapes. People with uneven hip rotation will stretch each side of the 
saddle differently, people with thicker legs may experience thigh rub, &c. I 
personally never found a Brooks comfortable and after riding one for about a 
year barely noticed any breaking in whereas the SA was the most comfortable 
saddle I ever sat in right out of the box. To each their own, best thing you 
can do is try as many saddles as possible.

On Sunday, December 4, 2016 at 1:22:48 AM UTC-5, Surlyprof wrote:
I received an email from Selle Anatomica that all their saddles were on sale 
for $99 during the holidays.  I had thought about the X-series in the past to 
replace my B17.  The goal was to get a saddle with a cutout.  Others I had been 
considering were the Brooks C17 Carved and the Rivet Pearl.  I like the Rivet 
and don't know much about the C17 carved but was wondering if the SA was worth 
trying while it is $50-60 less.  I've read people raving about the Rivet 
saddles here but also thought I remember some people complaining about the SA 
saddles sagging pretty quickly.  Any thoughts comparing these 3 choices?
Thanks,John

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