Two years ago I bought a short-nosed saddle for my son and liked how it felt on his bike, so I added the. same one on mine. Because I sit with my hips over the wide part of the saddle and am not a nose-sitter anyway, I've set mine to -3 degrees of downward tilt so it's still effectively flat up to a 6% gradient. Anything above that and I'm probably going to be taking spells standing out of the saddle an no longer riding in a purely seated position. Also, when a bike is on the turbo is really the best time to measure things like saddle tilt, assuming your floor is level to start with.
I'm a fairly new rider and had my saddle pointed down ever so slightly and noticed that I had absolutely no discomfort riding but following advice of other riders I leveled it out. Instantly noticed a difference started having discomfort. So I think pointing a saddle down slightly is beneficial for me at least.
It depends on a lot of factors. Sometimes needing to run a nose-down angle is indicative of other issues with the overall fit of your bike. If you’re getting front end pressure and alleviating that by tilting the nose down, you may be sitting too far forward of the “low point” in the saddle and thus not supporting the sit bones properly, leading to pain at the front. Alternatively you may have the saddle too far back, or too long of a reach that is pulling you to the front of the saddle, again causing front side pain. If that’s what you’re experiencing, try moving the saddle forward, and examine your position over the bike in general - are you naturally drifting forward? Can you reach the hoods and drops comfortably with bent elbows?
normally "flat" is measured across the middle part of the saddle where you actually sit that is supposed to be flat and not across the entire saddle the way the UCI is measuring. Many saddles have rear support going up or nose tip pointing down. If you measure across the entire saddle, it will seem to point "down" even when the middle part is actually "flat". Anyway, "flat" across the middle of the saddle is a good place to start and slightly "down" from there is fine if it works for you
The saddle rails define the saddle tilt. Horizontal rails means flat saddle position. Saddle form defines and/or describes how saddles match the riders bum.
@@antoniosegalada739way too many variables and types of saddles for this to be true. if my saddle rails were level it would be tilted forward to a ridiculous degree and unrideable. There’s no one way to define what is level bc saddles differ so much.
I'm finding the trend of snub nose saddles makes it LOOK like the saddle is tilting down but the part you actually contact, is about level. The tail of the saddles have a sweep and it makes level tougher to find.
They touched on this but it's the most important thing to remember. 99% of riders should not copy the pros. They are freaks of nature and can handle more extreme positions. They produce much more power than the rest of us and this power takes considerably more weight off of the hands, arms, and shoulders. For the rest of us, tilting your saddle forward will just put undo stress on those area and cause problems. We have to stop comparing ourselves with the pros.
We're not sure about freaks of nature but they certainly shouldn't be the bench mark of bike fits 👀 They ride lots more than most of us so will be extremely well adjusted to those long and low fits.
I'm a commuting cyclist in a very windy region. I changed to flat bars many years ago, and found that, whilst generally comfortable, cycling into the wind was awful. So, I added tri bars, which really helped on those windy days, but made setting the saddle angle really tricky. I think I have now got the worst of all worlds - compression of the nether regions when using the tri bars, and numb hands when I'm on the flat bars. A tilting saddle sounds like heaven!
Try shorter cranks and adjust saddle height, reach, and set back as points on a series of circles so, for example, moving saddle forward will raise saddle by a few millimetres in relation to when it was back to get same circle and radii proportions. It's a pain to have to adjust height, set-back, and tilt for every change so make sure you have good hex keys and, strongly recommended, a small torque wrench (expensive, but I got my Wera set in a London Triathlon clearance sale). Make one change, eg set-back, see how it is, then change height, see how it is, then change tilt but make sure you make little marks so you can go back to where you were before each change. You can get lucky and have it just right very quickly, or you can take weeks of fiddling - I've had both scenarios over the decades
I'm at around 1.5 degrees down myself. Even minute changes of 0.1-0.2 degrees I notice a difference. As of right now this seems to be a happy medium for me. If I tilt lower I slide towards the nose causing perennial pressure, more hand pressure, pain in the traps, knees. Tilt back I sit further back on the saddle. I do get a bit less hand pressure but can't rotate hips so I get lower back pain, chafing from the wider part of the saddle and also more perennial pressure. In either direction I'm slower as well. Though since the tilt changes where I sit on the saddle then maybe changes in saddle height and fore/after to compensate might be worth experimenting more with. Less hand pressure with similar power and no lower back pain would be ideal.
Had mine adjusted million times to get the best position that suits my style. Its always slightly nose up. This reduces burdens on my palm and butt. Less fidgeting around the saddle too as its comfortable enough for long ride.
Good video, it’s nice that the bike fitter addressed the angle of different saddle shapes, in particular the SMP. I’ve use SMP’s for a long time and through trial and error came to the same conclusions as the bike fitter.
I say have your saddle at the most comfortable angle for you. I tilt mine down slightly, to take pressure off the front area. Too much, and it's then uncomfortable on my butt, so it's a fine balance! I have the same saddle on my gravel and road bikes. As the geometry is different between the bikes, the tilt of the saddle needs to be different, so that the angle feels the same when I'm sitting on each bike. It took a lot of faffing about in my kitchen and then testing around the village about 100 times for me to realise this 😊
Interesting information. Thanks!! I may experiment with tilt just a bit. HOWEVER, I should pass this on. I had been having problems with a sore butt even after a 40 mile ride. I was about to start buying new saddles to find one that would give me a better ride, but then I had the idea to try moving my existing saddle back a bit (maybe 1/4 inch). I noticed a big difference. I slid it back even more, for a total of maybe 3/4 inch. I recently completed a century ride with no problems at all. Maybe you could discuss moving the saddle forward or backward with a fitter. Might not be worth a full episode, but might be good for a GCN Tech question.
I've had my saddles tilted 6° downwards for many years (short nose saddles, measured by placing a piece of wood on top of the saddle so it rested front and back), as a result of explicit testing in bikefits on multiple bikes.
I unknowingly had my saddle pointing down (it almost looked level) and kept sliding uncomfortably towards the handlebar. If that wasn't uncomfortable enough, the padding in my bike shorts were bunching up uncontrollably needless to say, my toes in my shoes were also getting crunched up causing discomfort from head to toe. Got home, readjusted the saddle to point upwards at the tongue and WOW! ! It was like night and day! NO MORE discomfort and everything from the toes upward was relaxed and the ride afterwards was absolutely splendid BUT I guess it really depends on the type of bike you have between the feet!
When I installed aero bars (2-3 years ago), I started changing the saddle angle after looking at Mark Beaumont's saddle. I have since found the sweet spot for comfort and even when I'm not using the bars, I feel like there is less pressure on my crotch with a slight angle. Definitely worth trying!
Last year I was experiencing a lot of pain developing in my right knee, thought it might be a bike fit issue, took the bike in,, as soon as I sat on it the bike fitter saw the problem, my saddle was angle too far down, hence all my weight was moving forward resulting in too much pressure on my knees as I was subconsciously trying to push my weight back up the saddle. So in short, yeas, very important to get yer saddle sorted.
Interesting video! What we experimented is the design of the saddle helps to increase the power benefit that you been mentioning without the problems to have a forward tilt. On the video, I missed to mentioned that a forward tilt the cyclist slides on the nose, where the saddle is narrow INCREASING THE PRESSURE IN THE PROSTATIC AREA
My rule of thumb is with modern kick-up saddle shape, the tail of the saddle - the nose of the saddle - the handle bar of the bike should be inline. Or simply the saddle should point to your handle bar. That gives me an overall best.
I just DONT care what other cyclists say about my saddle angle. My saddle is pointing down 4 degrees since I ride road bikes. Because it’s the best position for me. And that’s the only thing that counts.
My saddle had a slight upward tilt, like 1-2 degrees. I realised it after years and decided to tilt it downwards today to see if it works. It really did help in terms of comfort and pressure on the buttocks/ bones as well as ease of riding But after 5 hrs of riding, I started feeling discomfort in my shoulders and neck. But still I feel downward tilt is the best as it helped me cover 100 kms with ease. Only started today, will update more later.
I have always tried to have the "nose" of the saddle parallel to the ground. since the rear end of the saddle is usually going up a bit more putting the water spirit level from end to tip will mean the nose of the saddle is pointing up. So I'm putting the level just on the front half of the saddle and try to get that part level which means that completely back to front is slightly down.
By mistake/accident, my saddle got set up about 3 degrees negative on my roadbike before a 100 mile fondo. Had to do with travelling and bike packaging for shipping. Anyway, I can vouch for me, and I won't be tilting my saddle forward. I couldn't understand how come I kept sitting on the nose with a ton of pressure on the lower region, and this also made the bike feel "short". So for me at least, I'll leave mine 0-degrees level. I ride with a Selle Italia SLR Gel Flow which does have quite a bit of padding and sort of flat, so I slid forward all the time. In disclosure, halfway through we did a roadside hack and got it somewhere about 1 degree b/c by then I knew I had some issue, I just didn't understand it. Ahh what we learn by trial and ERROR.
I’ve always been a fan/slave to a flat saddle angle, in my bike fit this year we adjusted my saddle to have a -1.6 degree tilt which along with a few other tweaks definitely improved my comfort on the bike.
Bryan's remote-tilt saddle idea makes more sense than setting the nose downward when, say, 10% of one's overall ride is going up, creating other potentially negative results to the rider's body due to position for that other 90% of the time. My rides routinely have 1,300-1,700 ft of gain over 25-30 miles, mostly in short, steep (up to 15%) climbs. Setting my saddle to compensate for maybe 5 of that 30 miles seems to raise concerns of comfort--my #1 goal for a successful ride; and since it would appear that a comfortable rider is a more efficient rider (see all the evidence of tire pressure-related performance gains), I think I'll take those two, related, factors, and ride a nearly flat saddle setting. Of course, riders more concerned with flat out speed will pooh pooh such frilly thinking; but as I enter my 36th year of riding (and between 250,000-300,000 total miles), I can say my desire for the highest performance is now behind me (cough cough).
More than half of my TIME is going up. My 25 mile rides are 2500-3500ft. Lots of sitting and spinning. Down is much less of my time as I'm going MUCH faster. I need a small downward tilt. Everyone is different.
Excellent piece Conor. You’re a natural broadcaster. Are you going to do similar ‘cause and effect’ for the rest of the bike setup? Bars, cranks, stems? Etc.
I use a downward angle of 2-3 degrees. A steeper angle seems appropriate for people who spend a lot of time in the drops. I'm not doing that so a slight tilt is better for me.
Hello. My saddle used to be perfectly level. I tilted it down in the spring and forgot about it, but did develop intense pain on my bottom. It took a few rides before I linked the pain to the saddle position I had changed. I put it back to level and pain was gone. Few weeks later I had a bike fit with a pro, and he decided to tilt the saddle again. Pain came back immediately. I leveled the saddle again and pain is no more. So in my case, titlting the saddle is a no-no
I'm 6'4 on a 60cm cyclocross bike that I use for gravel and road biking... they have slightly different geometry from a strict road bike... I find myself never being able to find a true/perfect position. I'd say my limb lengths, torso lengths are all proportionate (in other words, I'm not 6'4 with long arms/legs short torso, or short legs long torso... I'm proportionate). In order to get full leg extension... I extend my seat post fully at its limit. Maybe 1cm passed it actually. Not only that, but I have to slide my saddle all the way back for a bit more leg extension, and reach (Since if I keep the saddle neutral or forward, I feel cramped up front). I even have a 110mm long stem. The position this puts me in.. gives me a feeling of kicking forward while my femur bones are too close to my torso (which doesn't allow me to put out as much power... although it puts me in a more aero position). Issue is... If I shorten the stem... I'm cramped. If I slide seat foward... I'm cramped. If I slide seat post down... legs don't get extension. I think I've come to the conclusion that my frame just isn't enough for me... Gotta go full road bike, maybe a 61cm. Thoughts from anyone? Looking for all the ideas I can get...
I always thought those curly saddles should work from the middle section. Have that middle section flat (being a very heavy DiYer, I have a short spirit level (for getting into nooks and crannies of timbers and on the top of relevant tools), which would put the nose quite a bit lower and the back quite high. It means we are not sitting on the saddle so much as perching on the flat central section and pushing backwards against the ridge at the back or, when relevant, moving forward to push backwards against the dropped down nose. I suspect the flat saddle comes from the old days of my youth when handlebars were not much lower than the saddle so riding on the tops was quite an upright position compared with today. For power riding, we got 'on the rivet' as the old leather saddles had a copper rivet on the nose and, as we got forward on the brake hoods or the deep drops (usually Cinelli), we pushed back on the saddle nose. Today, the bars are usually set quite a lot lower than the saddle and bars don't drop as deep as back then so we push back against the rear ridge more than old timers
Great info Connor and GCN, thanks! Since the bike angle always matches the slope of the road, if a rider maintains a consistent position when starting a climb, there would be no extra rotation of the hip or pelvic joint. So, I suspect that a negative seat angle on climbs helps compensate for slight shifts in rider position while seated, and perhaps more importantly, a shift in the rider's pedal force, or downstroke direction. That is, the main push of the downstroke may shift from roughly vertical on the flats, eg: 12 oclock to 6 o'clock, to slightly forward like 1 o'clock to 7 o'clock on hills. From Newton's famous action / reaction law, this force shift would tend to cause a rearward slide on the saddle, which can be compensated for by a negative saddle tilt. In fact, any riding position or natural pedalling tendency that emphasizes a more forward oriented downstroke, harnessing more glutes and hamstrings than quads, may benefit from a negative saddle angle, for the same reason.
I found that I have to tilt my saddle back rather than forwards. If it's tilted forwards I get wrist pain. If it's tilted backwards I get numbness in the nether region when going uphill. The wrist pain quickly becomes unbearable and persists even after the ride, so that's a no-go. On the other hand, I have found that I can shift around a bit on the bike to afford a position to relieve the numbenss (if the saddle isn't tilted too far back and the numbness is only slight). Maybe this would decrease my power output going uphill a little bit while going uphill but tbh I couldn't care less if it improves my comfort and if it means I can ride for longer.
When I was 20 I had a 40kph wind pushing my body back and I had nose down saddle. 50 years later the upper body weight is larger and the wind is less. My saddle is flat these days or I get arm and shoulder fatigue. And the bars are higher.
I've been playing around with saddle angle for a while now. My saddle has a very slight "valley" in the middle where it feels comfortable for me. I had it nose down by about 3-ish degrees and didn't really slide forward, but I did notice some "pressure" in that direction. Just a sort of tugging that was trying to pull my chamois toward the rear. I moved it more toward flat and that issue seems to have gotten less pronounced. This seems like one of those personal preference adjustments for sure. What feels comfortable for one person won't work another. Just my experience...
As one of the comments said, we should be measuring saddle tilt based on the rails. If the rails are parallel to the ground, then the saddle is at 0 degree tilt. This should be used as standard method of measurment that provides common baseline/starting point as there are too many different saddle shapes above the rails.
Does the height difference between the saddle and the handlebars have any impact on saddle tilt. Surely a slammed handlebar will require more negative tilt.
I have noted this thread with astonishment.... I already dealt with this topic 35 years ago. On my mountain bike, where I ride up much steeper ramps. My saddle was and is always tilted forward. On my mountain bike a bit more than on my road bike. I have developed a sense for it over the years. Do I feel comfortable or not? The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
As someone with lower back pain I can confirm that a small negative tilted saddle helps reduce (my) back pain. We don't sit in an "L" shape on a bike, so there's little need for a horizontally flat saddle. Of course it's all a personal preference, so experiment.
Pretty interesting. I swapped saddle not that long ago and noticed that the shape is definitely looking more pointed down, since then I've began to experience a bit of lasting knee pain and the return of tingly hands while I'm out riding. Off to tilt it back up now, fingers crossed.
if your saddle is at 0 degrees on flat ground - and you are riding a 10% or 20% gradient - it will REMAIN 0 degrees to the ground regardless of the gradient - MOST riders do tilt forward at the hips to compensate for the gradient and increase in power required by driving into the pedals harder when in the saddle - similar to how a sprint runner tilts forward to get maximum propulsion - the steeper the pitch the MORE the hip tilt - but this technique also occurs on the flats when a rider attempts to get into a deep aero-tuck to reduce wind drag - they are the EXACT same kinematic postures - I think the reason for 0 degrees saddle is to evenly distribute the body weight on the load bearing points of the pelvis bones structural - this is what the manufacture has designed for at 0 degrees - so when you tilt your saddle forward you are disrupting that weight distribution and overloading certain skeletal load bearing points - sure mountain climbing may benefit with tilting forward but the majority of the race parcours is flat or rolling terrain - with comparably short intermittent mountains - point being - while you MIGHT improve performance on mountains - you are almost certain to develop OTHER physiological issues long-term - upper shoulder-elbow-wrist-hand come to mind as they are going to be forced to take on MORE load bearing duties than they otherwise would - to PROVE this - tilt your saddle forward 20-30 degrees and go for 1-2h ride - you WILL feel it - so even at 10 degrees that added load will be there - in short - I think it is a BAD idea - just a trendy fad - I am certain it is NOT the reason Pogabike wins races - his power in the mountains comes when he is OUT OF THE SADDLE after all - less so when he is in it
My saddle position changes slowly over the season and of course with different saddles. As a Long Distance /Endurance rider comfort is faster for me. I basically start at level and then make small adjustments if I notice that I am sliding forward or back on the saddle (leather saddles Brooks or Berthoud). I have recently bought a 3D printed saddle and notice that I want to tilt it down slightly (you just don't slid at all on these). As always just my 2 cents
I live in a hilly area. Constantly up and down. I run -8% or saddle nose .5 inch lower than the rear end and sit towards the rear of the saddle while climbing. When the road flattens out i slide forward, lower my shoulders and tilt my pelvis forward. It helps keep my thighs out of my belly too😊
@@gcn what are long rides? 😂 jk. Everything is fine until the legs run out of steam. Then the upper body gets pretty heavy on the bars. Pinky fingers start to get tingly. Punishment for weak legs!
For most riders a subtle increase in power output is wastly uninteresting, compared to their saddle comfort and the avoidance of saddle sores. So your saddle should be adjusted for that and nothing else.
You can see from the responses that measuring the angle of various saddles , and what "flat" means, on different saddles remains confusing. Flat on a new Arione will be zero degrees, while it might be -6 degrees on a SMP. This was touched upon in the clip, but remains unclear.
10:02 I sit on about -8 to -10. This is mainly for comfort as 90 percent of the time im in the tri bars as the handle bar’s flares up my carpal tunnel. I find this pretty comfortable for even long rides. Any flatter and i end up with a little bruising. 😢. I also find it works really well going up hill as a backstop to put some seated power through the pedals.😊
Been doing it on my bikes.. but it depends on if I have slammed bars or what. My reasoning.. those seats without the front.. and sit bones I have them all pretty much max tilt but on a 70 post that's still pretty much a slight tilt
at 4:20 your flat saddle would be at the angle of the hill, not half of the angle. As far as setting the angle, It's another case where what it looks like doesn't match up with reality. Firstly, your saddle shape plays a role,, depending on how your sit bones follow the shape. Often to get your sit bones kind of flat could need some tilt in either direction, and could be different between different people. Secondly, the idea of a flat saddle relies on the assumption that you're balancing on the saddle, where most people are holding some weight on their feet, and to a lesser degree hands.. Both of these supports will add some push backward, which can sometimes be better balances by slightly tilting the saddle down. Really, it makes most sense to adjust by feel. I end up with different angles depending on the saddle, and depending on the bike it's installed on.
Not in general. Lots of saddles have tilted rails so that with a flat saddle any forward/back adjustment of the saddle gives roughly the correct amount of up/down adjustment too. For example Fizik saddle rails are tilted 3 degrees or so. Of course the rails are good for relative adjustments (e.g tilt down one more degree) but not for general purpose recommendations.
I would like to see this video content discussed by Manon for a woman’s input. Obviously men and women are different in the bottom region. Does this have to be considered when looking at saddle angle?
Great idea and really important - there are lots of unique and specific considerations that need to be made between male and female anatomy - @globalcyclingnetwork lets do it!!
I have always run my saddle a .5 to 1 degree down. I was also running 25mm tires well before the pros went to wider tires. Guess that makes me a trend setter. 😁
I think you need to start with the correct sadle to support your body with you seat bones and supported first of all not sitting on soft tissue, so right width sadle. The saddle angle should related to the seat bones forward which should be level with the ground and tilting down as required. More tilt should relate to handle bar height and reach as with hip rotation forwards. Triathlons and time trials more commonly wiill require more tilt forward as with any cycling in aero positions. In my opinion.
only part of a saddle that should be (approximately) flat is the front half (in profile). that usually means the rear has a nice little kick-up which is more supportive and helps with power production 'cause you can sort of push off it. so there.
Just ignore those roadies snobs that judge others on how you setup your bike. Especially those that are not trying to help newbies and are condescending. Everyone’s physique is different and why copy the pros especially when the tilt angle is restricted by UCI rules? Just stop caring and set it up what feels most comfortable to you and the terrain you ride in most often.
Good data here that makes perfect sense, but it can't be looked at in isolation - everything interacts. I think the saddle angle should be paired with the stem drop. Pros slam their stems giving you better aerodynamics, and the saddle tilting down would relive the strain on the lumbar and sacrum. My lower back is fused from L4 through S1 and I have to tilt my saddle down even on a more upright gravel bike.
2-5 degrees base off of the flat portion of the seat which generally the front. Youth, ( under 35 ), is where flexibility still exists. The older one gets, less flexibility, the more the stem angle comes up and back, the less we are into the drops. At 68 I still prefer a drop bar, no flat, with around 1-3 inches of bar height below the nose of the seat. I've had my nose down where I was nosed down too much but was comfortable. I fit myself, it comes close enough. Generally the only time I've experienced knee pain was when I had my seat too far forward or backward and height not adjusted correctly. As far as the back pain and shoulders, I keep my core extremely strong and do an array of upper body exercises such as shoulder shrugs to keep my neck strong. I share nearly the same seat heights, angle, fore and aft positioning on both my gravel and road bikes. Comfort is key, first in the saddle then my extremities, (body).
Unlike the pros, the rest of us also usually have to come *down* the very same slopes that we climb so any climb-favorable tilt should not end up causing instability on the way down.
Prefer to keep my saddle level, not enough hills in Essex to warrant the change. Any time my saddle has pointed down even a small amount feels like I'm slipping forwards.
There’s a relatively new product called a SwitchGrade that retrofits onto your seatpost. Let’s you change saddle angle down for climbing then back to flat for level ground.
The fitter recommended -3 to -6 for a saddle with a "kick" or higher rear section. Would this not result in a much steeper effective negative angle? Or by negative angle was he referring to placing the nose higher?
When there is a ‘kick’ or a curve to the saddle we just need to account for this as we know the rider is not sitting on the peak of this rear kick or curve so if we were to set one of those saddle ‘flat’ from the high points then it would likely result in quite a relative nose up position which would likely lead to more central soft tissue pressure and/or more posterior tilt of the pelvis
@@thebikethebody got it. So you are measuring with the level across the entire saddle and not just the flat section from middle to nose. I will try that recommended angle as a starting point. Thanks for the info.
This thing with tilting the saddle down, when riding uphill. It doesn't make sense to me. After all, even though the bike will be going up a gradient, your body with respect to the bike does not really change position does it? Or does it? If so, surely not as much as the gradient of the hill?
As a mtber I've heard of, but never been fussed by the negative views of saddle adjustment, but have always found my saddle is comfortable with quite a negative angle. It seems a bit odd that peer pressure has stopped people experimenting with ways that may improve comfort on their bike. But then you don't see bar ends on MTBs anymore so who am I to judge!
Most saddle are concave when you look at lateral profile. I don't know why. Slightly convex saddle work much better for me. Curvature of saddle make a huge difference.
Are there any benefits of tilting your saddle angle upwards? I find that I have to tilt my saddle up a little to prevent slipping forwards, and to try and ease numbness of my hands.
People with an SMP will know. Saddle angle is everything! But its not really related to how it works on most saddles. It is all about sitting in that curved cradle. -4.2 degrees on an SMP dynamic as shown in the video. Haha yes there is a difference between 4 and 4.5 degrees nose down.
Yes this can happen in plenty of riders, wider saddle noses or longer saddle noses can cause this more, or just bigger thighs also - if it bothers or chafes then saddles with a shorter nose or narrower nose could be a good option
Level or ever so slightly tilted nose down works for me. Setting saddle height too high is, I believe, common. People are using formulas and believe they need the saddle high for power. But this just makes hip mobility an issue and given one hip is often less mobile than the other, hot spots or knee issues on one side can result on one side. Get the saddle height that works. Nose down never worked for me. Feel my bike is dialed in now on a flatter saddle.
Most people don't have Pogacar's upper body weight coupled with his power! The more power you put out, the less weight on your hands. If most people tilted their saddle like Pogacars they would quickly have hand/arm/neck/shoulder aches and would be riding round with arms locked out!
Have you tried changing your saddle angle? 📐
nope, if not right angle it feels like im falling off my saddle and ill keep moving my but further back :O
Two years ago I bought a short-nosed saddle for my son and liked how it felt on his bike, so I added the. same one on mine. Because I sit with my hips over the wide part of the saddle and am not a nose-sitter anyway, I've set mine to -3 degrees of downward tilt so it's still effectively flat up to a 6% gradient. Anything above that and I'm probably going to be taking spells standing out of the saddle an no longer riding in a purely seated position. Also, when a bike is on the turbo is really the best time to measure things like saddle tilt, assuming your floor is level to start with.
I’ve been running a -2.5 degree angle for close to 10 years now, it works so I have no desire to change.
Balance of Numbness in the crotch vs. pain in the hands = "some" down tilt of the saddle nose.
Very Scientific😂
I haven't but I will try from now on, thanks.
I'm a fairly new rider and had my saddle pointed down ever so slightly and noticed that I had absolutely no discomfort riding but following advice of other riders I leveled it out. Instantly noticed a difference started having discomfort. So I think pointing a saddle down slightly is beneficial for me at least.
It depends on a lot of factors. Sometimes needing to run a nose-down angle is indicative of other issues with the overall fit of your bike. If you’re getting front end pressure and alleviating that by tilting the nose down, you may be sitting too far forward of the “low point” in the saddle and thus not supporting the sit bones properly, leading to pain at the front. Alternatively you may have the saddle too far back, or too long of a reach that is pulling you to the front of the saddle, again causing front side pain. If that’s what you’re experiencing, try moving the saddle forward, and examine your position over the bike in general - are you naturally drifting forward? Can you reach the hoods and drops comfortably with bent elbows?
@@phishphood423 Very good info in your comment.
normally "flat" is measured across the middle part of the saddle where you actually sit that is supposed to be flat and not across the entire saddle the way the UCI is measuring. Many saddles have rear support going up or nose tip pointing down. If you measure across the entire saddle, it will seem to point "down" even when the middle part is actually "flat". Anyway, "flat" across the middle of the saddle is a good place to start and slightly "down" from there is fine if it works for you
The saddle rails define the saddle tilt. Horizontal rails means flat saddle position. Saddle form defines and/or describes how saddles match the riders bum.
@@antoniosegalada739way too many variables and types of saddles for this to be true. if my saddle rails were level it would be tilted forward to a ridiculous degree and unrideable. There’s no one way to define what is level bc saddles differ so much.
I'm finding the trend of snub nose saddles makes it LOOK like the saddle is tilting down but the part you actually contact, is about level. The tail of the saddles have a sweep and it makes level tougher to find.
They touched on this but it's the most important thing to remember. 99% of riders should not copy the pros. They are freaks of nature and can handle more extreme positions. They produce much more power than the rest of us and this power takes considerably more weight off of the hands, arms, and shoulders. For the rest of us, tilting your saddle forward will just put undo stress on those area and cause problems. We have to stop comparing ourselves with the pros.
We're not sure about freaks of nature but they certainly shouldn't be the bench mark of bike fits 👀 They ride lots more than most of us so will be extremely well adjusted to those long and low fits.
As someone who has a 10° angle saddle, I'm definitely not a freak of nature.
It's not that bad if you're short tho
@@gcn "Freaks of nature" was said lovingly and jealously.
@@2ball434 I'm glad it's working for you but I'm willing to bet you're also an outlier. But I'm happy to be wrong as well.
100%
I'm a commuting cyclist in a very windy region. I changed to flat bars many years ago, and found that, whilst generally comfortable, cycling into the wind was awful.
So, I added tri bars, which really helped on those windy days, but made setting the saddle angle really tricky. I think I have now got the worst of all worlds - compression of the nether regions when using the tri bars, and numb hands when I'm on the flat bars.
A tilting saddle sounds like heaven!
Try shorter cranks and adjust saddle height, reach, and set back as points on a series of circles so, for example, moving saddle forward will raise saddle by a few millimetres in relation to when it was back to get same circle and radii proportions. It's a pain to have to adjust height, set-back, and tilt for every change so make sure you have good hex keys and, strongly recommended, a small torque wrench (expensive, but I got my Wera set in a London Triathlon clearance sale). Make one change, eg set-back, see how it is, then change height, see how it is, then change tilt but make sure you make little marks so you can go back to where you were before each change. You can get lucky and have it just right very quickly, or you can take weeks of fiddling - I've had both scenarios over the decades
I'm at around 1.5 degrees down myself. Even minute changes of 0.1-0.2 degrees I notice a difference. As of right now this seems to be a happy medium for me. If I tilt lower I slide towards the nose causing perennial pressure, more hand pressure, pain in the traps, knees. Tilt back I sit further back on the saddle. I do get a bit less hand pressure but can't rotate hips so I get lower back pain, chafing from the wider part of the saddle and also more perennial pressure. In either direction I'm slower as well. Though since the tilt changes where I sit on the saddle then maybe changes in saddle height and fore/after to compensate might be worth experimenting more with. Less hand pressure with similar power and no lower back pain would be ideal.
Had mine adjusted million times to get the best position that suits my style. Its always slightly nose up. This reduces burdens on my palm and butt. Less fidgeting around the saddle too as its comfortable enough for long ride.
Good video, it’s nice that the bike fitter addressed the angle of different saddle shapes, in particular the SMP.
I’ve use SMP’s for a long time and through trial and error came to the same conclusions as the bike fitter.
Cats or dogs? Who win?
I say have your saddle at the most comfortable angle for you. I tilt mine down slightly, to take pressure off the front area. Too much, and it's then uncomfortable on my butt, so it's a fine balance! I have the same saddle on my gravel and road bikes. As the geometry is different between the bikes, the tilt of the saddle needs to be different, so that the angle feels the same when I'm sitting on each bike. It took a lot of faffing about in my kitchen and then testing around the village about 100 times for me to realise this 😊
You could solve that faster with a bike fit 😊
@@PhiyackYuh I've had a bike fit.
But only on one of my bikes 🤪
Ive always rode with a 2-4% negative saddle drop never had any issues great content Content Conor.
Interesting information. Thanks!! I may experiment with tilt just a bit. HOWEVER, I should pass this on. I had been having problems with a sore butt even after a 40 mile ride. I was about to start buying new saddles to find one that would give me a better ride, but then I had the idea to try moving my existing saddle back a bit (maybe 1/4 inch). I noticed a big difference. I slid it back even more, for a total of maybe 3/4 inch. I recently completed a century ride with no problems at all.
Maybe you could discuss moving the saddle forward or backward with a fitter. Might not be worth a full episode, but might be good for a GCN Tech question.
I've had my saddles tilted 6° downwards for many years (short nose saddles, measured by placing a piece of wood on top of the saddle so it rested front and back), as a result of explicit testing in bikefits on multiple bikes.
I unknowingly had my saddle pointing down (it almost looked level) and kept sliding uncomfortably towards the handlebar.
If that wasn't uncomfortable enough, the padding in my bike shorts were bunching up uncontrollably needless to say, my toes in my shoes were also getting crunched up causing discomfort from head to toe.
Got home, readjusted the saddle to point upwards at the tongue and WOW! ! It was like night and day! NO MORE discomfort and everything from the toes upward was relaxed and the ride afterwards was absolutely splendid BUT I guess it really depends on the type of bike you have between the feet!
When I installed aero bars (2-3 years ago), I started changing the saddle angle after looking at Mark Beaumont's saddle. I have since found the sweet spot for comfort and even when I'm not using the bars, I feel like there is less pressure on my crotch with a slight angle. Definitely worth trying!
-8 works great for me. Love being able to roll forward, hunker up a bit and use the whole torso to drive through the glutes.
Last year I was experiencing a lot of pain developing in my right knee, thought it might be a bike fit issue, took the bike in,, as soon as I sat on it the bike fitter saw the problem, my saddle was angle too far down, hence all my weight was moving forward resulting in too much pressure on my knees as I was subconsciously trying to push my weight back up the saddle. So in short, yeas, very important to get yer saddle sorted.
Interesting video! What we experimented is the design of the saddle helps to increase the power benefit that you been mentioning without the problems to have a forward tilt.
On the video, I missed to mentioned that a forward tilt the cyclist slides on the nose, where the saddle is narrow INCREASING THE PRESSURE IN THE PROSTATIC AREA
My rule of thumb is with modern kick-up saddle shape, the tail of the saddle - the nose of the saddle - the handle bar of the bike should be inline. Or simply the saddle should point to your handle bar. That gives me an overall best.
That has always worked for me well. Too high and the taint hurts+goes numb. Too low and you just fight it by pushing against the bars.
I just DONT care what other cyclists say about my saddle angle. My saddle is pointing down 4 degrees since I ride road bikes. Because it’s the best position for me. And that’s the only thing that counts.
Hallelujah
I adjust mine for comfort only.
I heard someone say cycling is 80% trend and 20% practicality and performance, they had a point!
No! No! No! The only important thing is that it looks good!
My saddle had a slight upward tilt, like 1-2 degrees. I realised it after years and decided to tilt it downwards today to see if it works. It really did help in terms of comfort and pressure on the buttocks/ bones as well as ease of riding But after 5 hrs of riding, I started feeling discomfort in my shoulders and neck. But still I feel downward tilt is the best as it helped me cover 100 kms with ease. Only started today, will update more later.
I have always tried to have the "nose" of the saddle parallel to the ground. since the rear end of the saddle is usually going up a bit more putting the water spirit level from end to tip will mean the nose of the saddle is pointing up. So I'm putting the level just on the front half of the saddle and try to get that part level which means that completely back to front is slightly down.
Was just adjusting my saddle tilt and as if GCN heard my plea for help this video came up 30 mins later 😂
Very informative video excellent analysis.
By mistake/accident, my saddle got set up about 3 degrees negative on my roadbike before a 100 mile fondo. Had to do with travelling and bike packaging for shipping. Anyway, I can vouch for me, and I won't be tilting my saddle forward. I couldn't understand how come I kept sitting on the nose with a ton of pressure on the lower region, and this also made the bike feel "short". So for me at least, I'll leave mine 0-degrees level. I ride with a Selle Italia SLR Gel Flow which does have quite a bit of padding and sort of flat, so I slid forward all the time. In disclosure, halfway through we did a roadside hack and got it somewhere about 1 degree b/c by then I knew I had some issue, I just didn't understand it. Ahh what we learn by trial and ERROR.
I’ve always been a fan/slave to a flat saddle angle, in my bike fit this year we adjusted my saddle to have a -1.6 degree tilt which along with a few other tweaks definitely improved my comfort on the bike.
Bryan's remote-tilt saddle idea makes more sense than setting the nose downward when, say, 10% of one's overall ride is going up, creating other potentially negative results to the rider's body due to position for that other 90% of the time. My rides routinely have 1,300-1,700 ft of gain over 25-30 miles, mostly in short, steep (up to 15%) climbs. Setting my saddle to compensate for maybe 5 of that 30 miles seems to raise concerns of comfort--my #1 goal for a successful ride; and since it would appear that a comfortable rider is a more efficient rider (see all the evidence of tire pressure-related performance gains), I think I'll take those two, related, factors, and ride a nearly flat saddle setting. Of course, riders more concerned with flat out speed will pooh pooh such frilly thinking; but as I enter my 36th year of riding (and between 250,000-300,000 total miles), I can say my desire for the highest performance is now behind me (cough cough).
More than half of my TIME is going up. My 25 mile rides are 2500-3500ft. Lots of sitting and spinning. Down is much less of my time as I'm going MUCH faster. I need a small downward tilt. Everyone is different.
Excellent piece Conor. You’re a natural broadcaster. Are you going to do similar ‘cause and effect’ for the rest of the bike setup? Bars, cranks, stems? Etc.
I use a downward angle of 2-3 degrees. A steeper angle seems appropriate for people who spend a lot of time in the drops. I'm not doing that so a slight tilt is better for me.
My trek seat post is weird. I can’t even adjust saddle angle much so never thought about it.
Hello. My saddle used to be perfectly level. I tilted it down in the spring and forgot about it, but did develop intense pain on my bottom. It took a few rides before I linked the pain to the saddle position I had changed. I put it back to level and pain was gone. Few weeks later I had a bike fit with a pro, and he decided to tilt the saddle again. Pain came back immediately. I leveled the saddle again and pain is no more. So in my case, titlting the saddle is a no-no
I'm 6'4 on a 60cm cyclocross bike that I use for gravel and road biking... they have slightly different geometry from a strict road bike...
I find myself never being able to find a true/perfect position.
I'd say my limb lengths, torso lengths are all proportionate (in other words, I'm not 6'4 with long arms/legs short torso, or short legs long torso... I'm proportionate).
In order to get full leg extension... I extend my seat post fully at its limit. Maybe 1cm passed it actually.
Not only that, but I have to slide my saddle all the way back for a bit more leg extension, and reach (Since if I keep the saddle neutral or forward, I feel cramped up front).
I even have a 110mm long stem.
The position this puts me in.. gives me a feeling of kicking forward while my femur bones are too close to my torso (which doesn't allow me to put out as much power... although it puts me in a more aero position).
Issue is...
If I shorten the stem... I'm cramped.
If I slide seat foward... I'm cramped.
If I slide seat post down... legs don't get extension.
I think I've come to the conclusion that my frame just isn't enough for me... Gotta go full road bike, maybe a 61cm.
Thoughts from anyone? Looking for all the ideas I can get...
I always thought those curly saddles should work from the middle section. Have that middle section flat (being a very heavy DiYer, I have a short spirit level (for getting into nooks and crannies of timbers and on the top of relevant tools), which would put the nose quite a bit lower and the back quite high. It means we are not sitting on the saddle so much as perching on the flat central section and pushing backwards against the ridge at the back or, when relevant, moving forward to push backwards against the dropped down nose.
I suspect the flat saddle comes from the old days of my youth when handlebars were not much lower than the saddle so riding on the tops was quite an upright position compared with today. For power riding, we got 'on the rivet' as the old leather saddles had a copper rivet on the nose and, as we got forward on the brake hoods or the deep drops (usually Cinelli), we pushed back on the saddle nose. Today, the bars are usually set quite a lot lower than the saddle and bars don't drop as deep as back then so we push back against the rear ridge more than old timers
Great info Connor and GCN, thanks! Since the bike angle always matches the slope of the road, if a rider maintains a consistent position when starting a climb, there would be no extra rotation of the hip or pelvic joint. So, I suspect that a negative seat angle on climbs helps compensate for slight shifts in rider position while seated, and perhaps more importantly, a shift in the rider's pedal force, or downstroke direction. That is, the main push of the downstroke may shift from roughly vertical on the flats, eg: 12 oclock to 6 o'clock, to slightly forward like 1 o'clock to 7 o'clock on hills. From Newton's famous action / reaction law, this force shift would tend to cause a rearward slide on the saddle, which can be compensated for by a negative saddle tilt. In fact, any riding position or natural pedalling tendency that emphasizes a more forward oriented downstroke, harnessing more glutes and hamstrings than quads, may benefit from a negative saddle angle, for the same reason.
I found that I have to tilt my saddle back rather than forwards. If it's tilted forwards I get wrist pain. If it's tilted backwards I get numbness in the nether region when going uphill. The wrist pain quickly becomes unbearable and persists even after the ride, so that's a no-go. On the other hand, I have found that I can shift around a bit on the bike to afford a position to relieve the numbenss (if the saddle isn't tilted too far back and the numbness is only slight). Maybe this would decrease my power output going uphill a little bit while going uphill but tbh I couldn't care less if it improves my comfort and if it means I can ride for longer.
Just know that setting it vertical is quite uncomfortable.
If you feel discomfort, try applying more chamois cream or switch to a narrower saddle.
If it's vertical, you have to slot it in.
You mean +90°?
@@b2thebyes 90° is vertical
@@adamc.2341 that's very steep, it might cause bot bot troubles
When I was 20 I had a 40kph wind pushing my body back and I had nose down saddle. 50 years later the upper body weight is larger and the wind is less. My saddle is flat these days or I get arm and shoulder fatigue. And the bars are higher.
I've been playing around with saddle angle for a while now. My saddle has a very slight "valley" in the middle where it feels comfortable for me. I had it nose down by about 3-ish degrees and didn't really slide forward, but I did notice some "pressure" in that direction. Just a sort of tugging that was trying to pull my chamois toward the rear. I moved it more toward flat and that issue seems to have gotten less pronounced. This seems like one of those personal preference adjustments for sure. What feels comfortable for one person won't work another. Just my experience...
Absolutely right, in each case it needs to be specific to each rider, their anatomy, their riding posture, and the type of riding they are taking on
As one of the comments said, we should be measuring saddle tilt based on the rails. If the rails are parallel to the ground, then the saddle is at 0 degree tilt. This should be used as standard method of measurment that provides common baseline/starting point as there are too many different saddle shapes above the rails.
Does the height difference between the saddle and the handlebars have any impact on saddle tilt. Surely a slammed handlebar will require more negative tilt.
I have noted this thread with astonishment....
I already dealt with this topic 35 years ago.
On my mountain bike, where I ride up much steeper ramps.
My saddle was and is always tilted forward.
On my mountain bike a bit more than on my road bike.
I have developed a sense for it over the years.
Do I feel comfortable or not? The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
My bit fit for saddle is -6 degree and short nose saddle. So comfy
Excellent and informative. Thanks. 🥂
As someone with lower back pain I can confirm that a small negative tilted saddle helps reduce (my) back pain. We don't sit in an "L" shape on a bike, so there's little need for a horizontally flat saddle. Of course it's all a personal preference, so experiment.
Pretty interesting. I swapped saddle not that long ago and noticed that the shape is definitely looking more pointed down, since then I've began to experience a bit of lasting knee pain and the return of tingly hands while I'm out riding. Off to tilt it back up now, fingers crossed.
if your saddle is at 0 degrees on flat ground - and you are riding a 10% or 20% gradient - it will REMAIN 0 degrees to the ground regardless of the gradient - MOST riders do tilt forward at the hips to compensate for the gradient and increase in power required by driving into the pedals harder when in the saddle - similar to how a sprint runner tilts forward to get maximum propulsion - the steeper the pitch the MORE the hip tilt - but this technique also occurs on the flats when a rider attempts to get into a deep aero-tuck to reduce wind drag - they are the EXACT same kinematic postures - I think the reason for 0 degrees saddle is to evenly distribute the body weight on the load bearing points of the pelvis bones structural - this is what the manufacture has designed for at 0 degrees - so when you tilt your saddle forward you are disrupting that weight distribution and overloading certain skeletal load bearing points - sure mountain climbing may benefit with tilting forward but the majority of the race parcours is flat or rolling terrain - with comparably short intermittent mountains - point being - while you MIGHT improve performance on mountains - you are almost certain to develop OTHER physiological issues long-term - upper shoulder-elbow-wrist-hand come to mind as they are going to be forced to take on MORE load bearing duties than they otherwise would - to PROVE this - tilt your saddle forward 20-30 degrees and go for 1-2h ride - you WILL feel it - so even at 10 degrees that added load will be there - in short - I think it is a BAD idea - just a trendy fad - I am certain it is NOT the reason Pogabike wins races - his power in the mountains comes when he is OUT OF THE SADDLE after all - less so when he is in it
My saddle position changes slowly over the season and of course with different saddles. As a Long Distance /Endurance rider comfort is faster for me. I basically start at level and then make small adjustments if I notice that I am sliding forward or back on the saddle (leather saddles Brooks or Berthoud). I have recently bought a 3D printed saddle and notice that I want to tilt it down slightly (you just don't slid at all on these). As always just my 2 cents
I live in a hilly area. Constantly up and down. I run -8% or saddle nose .5 inch lower than the rear end and sit towards the rear of the saddle while climbing. When the road flattens out i slide forward, lower my shoulders and tilt my pelvis forward. It helps keep my thighs out of my belly too😊
Sounds like you've found a great system that works for you! How do you get along with long rides?
@@gcn what are long rides? 😂 jk. Everything is fine until the legs run out of steam. Then the upper body gets pretty heavy on the bars. Pinky fingers start to get tingly. Punishment for weak legs!
For most riders a subtle increase in power output is wastly uninteresting, compared to their saddle comfort and the avoidance of saddle sores. So your saddle should be adjusted for that and nothing else.
Also, a comfortable saddle (and being comfortable in general) is going to allow you to put our way more power for longer anyway.
but that 1% increase of performance tho👀👀
You can see from the responses that measuring the angle of various saddles , and what "flat" means, on different saddles remains confusing. Flat on a new Arione will be zero degrees, while it might be -6 degrees on a SMP. This was touched upon in the clip, but remains unclear.
I noticed pain in my knees when my sattle had an angle of about -0,7 degrees. Need to adjust that now
10:02 I sit on about -8 to -10. This is mainly for comfort as 90 percent of the time im in the tri bars as the handle bar’s flares up my carpal tunnel. I find this pretty comfortable for even long rides. Any flatter and i end up with a little bruising. 😢. I also find it works really well going up hill as a backstop to put some seated power through the pedals.😊
Been doing it on my bikes.. but it depends on if I have slammed bars or what.
My reasoning.. those seats without the front.. and sit bones
I have them all pretty much max tilt but on a 70 post that's still pretty much a slight tilt
I've always found tilting the saddle more comfy and I've gotten used to it. Now the 0 tilt angle feels weird for me.
Do like Eddy Merckx: carry an allen key and adjust saddle in middle of stage or one-day race!
at 4:20 your flat saddle would be at the angle of the hill, not half of the angle.
As far as setting the angle, It's another case where what it looks like doesn't match up with reality.
Firstly, your saddle shape plays a role,, depending on how your sit bones follow the shape. Often to get your sit bones kind of flat could need some tilt in either direction, and could be different between different people.
Secondly, the idea of a flat saddle relies on the assumption that you're balancing on the saddle, where most people are holding some weight on their feet, and to a lesser degree hands.. Both of these supports will add some push backward, which can sometimes be better balances by slightly tilting the saddle down.
Really, it makes most sense to adjust by feel. I end up with different angles depending on the saddle, and depending on the bike it's installed on.
Would it make sense to use the saddle rails as a point or reference to determine the angle, especially with saddles like the SMP?
Not in general. Lots of saddles have tilted rails so that with a flat saddle any forward/back adjustment of the saddle gives roughly the correct amount of up/down adjustment too. For example Fizik saddle rails are tilted 3 degrees or so. Of course the rails are good for relative adjustments (e.g tilt down one more degree) but not for general purpose recommendations.
I would like to see this video content discussed by Manon for a woman’s input.
Obviously men and women are different in the bottom region. Does this have to be considered when looking at saddle angle?
Great idea and really important - there are lots of unique and specific considerations that need to be made between male and female anatomy - @globalcyclingnetwork lets do it!!
I have always run my saddle a .5 to 1 degree down. I was also running 25mm tires well before the pros went to wider tires. Guess that makes me a trend setter. 😁
I'm at 2-3 degrees nose down... using a 130mm wide saddle.... my bike is very comfortable now...
With a short saddle, the tilt must be done on the first part of the saddle or the entire one ?
I think you need to start with the correct sadle to support your body with you seat bones and supported first of all not sitting on soft tissue, so right width sadle. The saddle angle should related to the seat bones forward which should be level with the ground and tilting down as required. More tilt should relate to handle bar height and reach as with hip rotation forwards. Triathlons and time trials more commonly wiill require more tilt forward as with any cycling in aero positions. In my opinion.
What saddle is Connor using? Looks like some heavily padded Selle Italia saddle.
only part of a saddle that should be (approximately) flat is the front half (in profile). that usually means the rear has a nice little kick-up which is more supportive and helps with power production 'cause you can sort of push off it.
so there.
just an idea, if there are downhill dropper posts in mtb, why not a climbing dropper angle saddle?
edit (ok pro talked about it)
Never-ever did think about seat angle on a steep grade!
Good news.... The Aenomaly Switchgrade saddle tilt device is available now.
Just ignore those roadies snobs that judge others on how you setup your bike. Especially those that are not trying to help newbies and are condescending. Everyone’s physique is different and why copy the pros especially when the tilt angle is restricted by UCI rules? Just stop caring and set it up what feels most comfortable to you and the terrain you ride in most often.
Good data here that makes perfect sense, but it can't be looked at in isolation - everything interacts. I think the saddle angle should be paired with the stem drop. Pros slam their stems giving you better aerodynamics, and the saddle tilting down would relive the strain on the lumbar and sacrum. My lower back is fused from L4 through S1 and I have to tilt my saddle down even on a more upright gravel bike.
2-5 degrees base off of the flat portion of the seat which generally the front. Youth, ( under 35 ), is where flexibility still exists. The older one gets, less flexibility, the more the stem angle comes up and back, the less we are into the drops. At 68 I still prefer a drop bar, no flat, with around 1-3 inches of bar height below the nose of the seat. I've had my nose down where I was nosed down too much but was comfortable. I fit myself, it comes close enough. Generally the only time I've experienced knee pain was when I had my seat too far forward or backward and height not adjusted correctly. As far as the back pain and shoulders, I keep my core extremely strong and do an array of upper body exercises such as shoulder shrugs to keep my neck strong. I share nearly the same seat heights, angle, fore and aft positioning on both my gravel and road bikes. Comfort is key, first in the saddle then my extremities, (body).
Unlike the pros, the rest of us also usually have to come *down* the very same slopes that we climb so any climb-favorable tilt should not end up causing instability on the way down.
I tilted my mt bike saddle down after I felt I kept moving forward out of the saddle on steep trail climbs. My road bike is flat though.
How long before we have dynamic saddle tilt adjustment based on climb steepness?
Prefer to keep my saddle level, not enough hills in Essex to warrant the change. Any time my saddle has pointed down even a small amount feels like I'm slipping forwards.
Once you've found that perfect level it's so good 👌
There’s a relatively new product called a SwitchGrade that retrofits onto your seatpost. Let’s you change saddle angle down for climbing then back to flat for level ground.
Can you do one on crank length. I think everyone ignores that as well.
The fitter recommended -3 to -6 for a saddle with a "kick" or higher rear section. Would this not result in a much steeper effective negative angle? Or by negative angle was he referring to placing the nose higher?
When there is a ‘kick’ or a curve to the saddle we just need to account for this as we know the rider is not sitting on the peak of this rear kick or curve so if we were to set one of those saddle ‘flat’ from the high points then it would likely result in quite a relative nose up position which would likely lead to more central soft tissue pressure and/or more posterior tilt of the pelvis
@@thebikethebody got it. So you are measuring with the level across the entire saddle and not just the flat section from middle to nose. I will try that recommended angle as a starting point. Thanks for the info.
@@matthew.tamasco correct, let me know how you go and give me a shout if you need any further guidance 👍
Always perfectly level. I set it with a three foot level. (1m)
This thing with tilting the saddle down, when riding uphill. It doesn't make sense to me. After all, even though the bike will be going up a gradient, your body with respect to the bike does not really change position does it? Or does it? If so, surely not as much as the gradient of the hill?
As a mtber I've heard of, but never been fussed by the negative views of saddle adjustment, but have always found my saddle is comfortable with quite a negative angle. It seems a bit odd that peer pressure has stopped people experimenting with ways that may improve comfort on their bike. But then you don't see bar ends on MTBs anymore so who am I to judge!
Bar ends on old mtb bars are roughly where the brake levers are now. MTB bars have gotten really wide.
Most saddle are concave when you look at lateral profile. I don't know why. Slightly convex saddle work much better for me. Curvature of saddle make a huge difference.
I always set my saddle at an angle. Gives me much more comfort.
Conor's seat post in longer than my seat tube!😂🤣
I always put mine a little bit up on my hardtail mtb because of fork sag.
Well done Connor, it's a goodun. 👍
Are there any benefits of tilting your saddle angle upwards? I find that I have to tilt my saddle up a little to prevent slipping forwards, and to try and ease numbness of my hands.
Maybe try more setback instead?
That’s me, too, I like my saddle angle up a little.
So who's going to be the first to produce a remote saddle tilting gadget (a la dropper posts)?
TP saddle tilted downward? Could it be caused by the bike rack lifting the rear wheel up???
Well interesting. There are already dropper seat posts, why not trigger controlled saddle tilt? Dropper posts. Dipper saddles?
People with an SMP will know. Saddle angle is everything! But its not really related to how it works on most saddles. It is all about sitting in that curved cradle. -4.2 degrees on an SMP dynamic as shown in the video. Haha yes there is a difference between 4 and 4.5 degrees nose down.
I have a question, when I pedal my inner thighs hit my saddle. Is that normal?
Yes this can happen in plenty of riders, wider saddle noses or longer saddle noses can cause this more, or just bigger thighs also - if it bothers or chafes then saddles with a shorter nose or narrower nose could be a good option
(OT: Love the Irish colours on your sleeves :-)
Bb 86 install in carbon frame
Level or ever so slightly tilted nose down works for me. Setting saddle height too high is, I believe, common. People are using formulas and believe they need the saddle high for power. But this just makes hip mobility an issue and given one hip is often less mobile than the other, hot spots or knee issues on one side can result on one side. Get the saddle height that works. Nose down never worked for me. Feel my bike is dialed in now on a flatter saddle.
I always rode with negative saddle, interesting to know is now trendy
Most people don't have Pogacar's upper body weight coupled with his power! The more power you put out, the less weight on your hands. If most people tilted their saddle like Pogacars they would quickly have hand/arm/neck/shoulder aches and would be riding round with arms locked out!
Mine also point's down towards the hoods.
Thanks a lot!
Is there a difference in saddle angle for women vs men?
I'm nose up quite a bit. Its the only way my jacked up hands/wrists tollerate riding. Pretty flat on my tt bike though