thumperbob2002
Registered user
Try riding sports bikes for 30 years and you'll quickly realise all GSs are armchairs.
Sadly I have had enough of the uncomfortable GS seat allthough I love the bike. My poblem is that my Coccyx becomes painfull after 2 hours or about 100+ miles. I can get off and stretch legs etc. but once it has started it dosnt go away to the point that it affects my riding. I just finsished the Ride tour of the High Passes 9 days 2,200 miles. Each day was a slightly more painfull day than before. My final solution was Airhawk on front seat remove rear seat and sit with my bum off the back of the saddle in the space where the rear seat had taken. I have fiddled with Handlebar position and all seat height options and have reached the point where I think I will sell the GS.
But before I do that I was wondering whether anybody had experience of the Rallye seat? its seems to me that it actually slopes away at the rear and so means that the Coccyx are is not in as much contact with the saddle as the stadard seat.
Any other sugestions welcome, but if no solution I will go back to a sports Bike as I have no numb bum issues with the position on these.
Sadly I have had enough of the uncomfortable GS seat allthough I love the bike. My poblem is that my Coccyx becomes painfull after 2 hours or about 100+ miles. I can get off and stretch legs etc. but once it has started it dosnt go away to the point that it affects my riding. I just finsished the Ride tour of the High Passes 9 days 2,200 miles. Each day was a slightly more painfull day than before. My final solution was Airhawk on front seat remove rear seat and sit with my bum off the back of the saddle in the space where the rear seat had taken. I have fiddled with Handlebar position and all seat height options and have reached the point where I think I will sell the GS.
But before I do that I was wondering whether anybody had experience of the Rallye seat? its seems to me that it actually slopes away at the rear and so means that the Coccyx are is not in as much contact with the saddle as the stadard seat.
Any other sugestions welcome, but if no solution I will go back to a sports Bike as I have no numb bum issues with the position on these.
You are a bit far away from me to try my Rallye seat, but I would suggest you see if you could borrow one first
I have recently come back from the Stella Alpina to Lancashire on mine in one go no problem, and have even done LEJOG there and back in 40 hours on mine
It seems to help that you can move about on them quite easily, I also find my pivot pegs also help when I am moving about on the seat
I tried a Airhawk once and was not in the least impressed so its all down to individual butt shapes and pain thresholds
Hope this helps