GlasgowGaryH
Veteran
- Location
- Where ever I lay my hat
Are carbon seat posts really worth buying? Do they really make for a better ride? Not sure weather to buy or not
Are carbon seat posts really worth buying? Do they really make for a better ride? Not sure weather to buy or not![]()
Yes, they are light, they soak up masses of vibration and they don't seize in steel or ally frames. Oh, and they don't bend - I had a Control Tech ali post once that slowly bent over a few months despite having an internal reinforcing wall.
They do seize in ally frames as I know to my cost!
They do seize in ally frames as I know to my cost!
And in steel frames.
And the more you try and twist the seat post back and forth trying to get the bugger out, the more heat is generated and the more the carbon fibre expands, making it a nightmare to remove.
With due deference to your experience AlanW I don't think it's heat. I've a carbon post in my Ti MTB frame and I do know that it gets pretty tight if you don't remove and clean it occasionally. The stupid thing about it is that for reasons known only to Easton, the maker, the post has flats running up the front and rear, which form the perfect route for muddy water thrown up by the back wheel to dribble inside the frame. When you twist the post, grit gets forced into the tiny space between post and frame tube and makes the damned thing really tight. The more you twist the tighter it becomes as more and more dirt makes its way into the interface between frame and post. The lacquer has long worn off the inserted section and the bare post has a very "sticky" surface.
Clean the post, stuff a stick with a rag wrapped around it down the frame tube a couple of times then reinsert the post and it slips in nicely.
Well you may be correct, I can only quote as my experience. Taking into account that the seatpost in question had only been fitted less than twelve months on a bike fitted with mudguards. My mistake was not applies a thin coat of anti seize when I built the bike up.
And as ironic as it may seem, was the only reason that I was trying to remove it.......doh!
With my wife holding the bike and the rear wheel wedged against the bench in the garage I finally managed to get it to move from side to side., and every other rotation spraying WD40 around the diameter.
The more I wrestled it from side to side, the more you could definitely feel the heat building up. It was at the point when I had got it to rotate about 180 degrees in either direction that we stopped for a cuppa.
When we returned some 20 minutes later, and resumed our three way wrestling match, it then revolved a full 360 degrees? Now of course it could be that the WD40 had finally worked its magic, or the carbon had contracted?
A further hour followed before the swine finally came out, but after every 5 minutes hard rotating and trying to ease it upwards, we would wait for it to cool. Then, we would go back to working on the bike........
Yes I know....I'll get my coat.![]()
They are lighter seems to be the biggest attraction of getting them. As for being more comfortable they will probably soak up some road vibration but I'm not sure it's noticeable!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!