I'm in the process of dialing in the fit on my Toyo Atlantis and am in need of the group's advice on saddle positioning. I'm using albatross bars for a more upright position--a choice which I've come to love. But when I sit more upright, I'm noticing that I slide "down" on my B17 saddle. I have positioned the saddle to be parallel to the ground, with perhaps a slight upward tilt. I'd like my sit bones to be resting on the rear of the saddle. Should I simply give the saddle a more upward tilt? Any thoughts are welcome.
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I'm in the process of dialing in the fit on my Toyo Atlantis and am in need of the group's advice on saddle positioning. I'm using albatross bars for a more upright position--a choice which I've come to love. But when I sit more upright, I'm noticing that I slide "down" on my B17 saddle. I have positioned the saddle to be parallel to the ground, with perhaps a slight upward tilt. I'd like my sit bones to be resting on the rear of the saddle. Should I simply give the saddle a more upward tilt? Any thoughts are welcome.
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Yes, I would agree with Patrick the Deacon. I discovered my way-up tilt by accident after it slipped on a ride and I decided to just put up with it until I got home. By the time I got there I realized it felt weird at first, then I completely forgotten about my saddle. That's the Holy Grail, baby..if you aren't thinking about how the saddle feels, it works!
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And I have some homework from Deacon Patrick!

Absolutely no relationship to seller. 30 seconds to find the image. (Sorry to those in SF, it was easier hunting)
Saddle choice and setup is as personal as love, so I offer this FWIW. But my experience is that tilt is as crucial to comfort as height and sit bones and fore/aft position, and that a bad position will have to sliding forward to put excessive weight on shoulders, arms, and hands.I've tried the following Brooks saddles, at least one of each, with some, multiple iterations.B 17B 17 NProFlyerB 67The situp-and-beg model like the B 67 but without the springsAlso:Sugino BeltIdeal of some sort, at least 1 if not 2 of these.For all of them, I found that tilt was crucial to comfort (and I'm not using "crucial" in any sly secret way), far more so than with any other of the many other makes and models I've used.I found that, on road bikes, the Pro was the most comfortable; the B 17 and even B 17 N chafed. But while the Pro was comfortable in butt and thighs, I could never get the tilt right, and this was even after I invested in an infinitely-adjustable-tile post -- forget name -- that had an easily rotated tilt separate from the fore/aft adjustment. The Pro was as comfortable, tilt apart, as the original issue Flites I now use, but I could never get it adjusted just right to avoid sliding forward and getting goosed.
On Thu, Jan 2, 2020 at 9:41 AM Andrew Nussbaum <nus...@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm in the process of dialing in the fit on my Toyo Atlantis and am in need of the group's advice on saddle positioning. I'm using albatross bars for a more upright position--a choice which I've come to love. But when I sit more upright, I'm noticing that I slide "down" on my B17 saddle. I have positioned the saddle to be parallel to the ground, with perhaps a slight upward tilt. I'd like my sit bones to be resting on the rear of the saddle. Should I simply give the saddle a more upward tilt? Any thoughts are welcome.--
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