MrSteve
Zen MBB Master
Here's the back story:
Last weekend, while staring at my Sofrider V1 and dreaming of fairings,
I thought about frontal area.
Aha!
Something to do... I can reduce frontal area!
And I did, by fiddling with the 'seat post' height and the seat back angle,
along with the mounting bracket.
Doing this, I easily relaxed the seat back from it's 45 degree angle
another eight degrees or so.
Thanks to the user-friendly and simple TFT, adjusting the X-seam (measurement from seat back to the pedal)
was a snap.
My impressions?
My bike is faster now, an average of one mile per hour faster.
It accelerates downhill quicker, reaches top speed more quickly and has a faster top-end.
There was no penalty as far as pedaling power, due to the different seating position.
I can still climb hills with the same expenditure of effort.
The bike feels new(er) so, there's a new-bike excitement.
Feels different, twitchier: due to the lower center of gravity.
The only downside?
My neck does more work to support my head in this more reclined position.
Not a big deal for me, as my neck is overdeveloped... all those years spent
supporting my head, wearing a full-face helmet, struggling constantly
against the 80+ mile-per-hour head wind.
So, back to the question posed by the Subject line of this post:
How low can the seat-back be lowered?
I'm going to try it for myself, eventually, of course.
But I know (I assume) that the original test-rider(s) have already done so,
and so my question.
Is there a point of diminishing returns?
Does a head rest do more than simply provide a place for the head to rest?
Inquiring minds want to know!
Besides, speed is fun.
More speed is more funner.
-Steve
Last weekend, while staring at my Sofrider V1 and dreaming of fairings,
I thought about frontal area.
Aha!
Something to do... I can reduce frontal area!
And I did, by fiddling with the 'seat post' height and the seat back angle,
along with the mounting bracket.
Doing this, I easily relaxed the seat back from it's 45 degree angle
another eight degrees or so.
Thanks to the user-friendly and simple TFT, adjusting the X-seam (measurement from seat back to the pedal)
was a snap.
My impressions?
My bike is faster now, an average of one mile per hour faster.
It accelerates downhill quicker, reaches top speed more quickly and has a faster top-end.
There was no penalty as far as pedaling power, due to the different seating position.
I can still climb hills with the same expenditure of effort.
The bike feels new(er) so, there's a new-bike excitement.
Feels different, twitchier: due to the lower center of gravity.
The only downside?
My neck does more work to support my head in this more reclined position.
Not a big deal for me, as my neck is overdeveloped... all those years spent
supporting my head, wearing a full-face helmet, struggling constantly
against the 80+ mile-per-hour head wind.
So, back to the question posed by the Subject line of this post:
How low can the seat-back be lowered?
I'm going to try it for myself, eventually, of course.
But I know (I assume) that the original test-rider(s) have already done so,
and so my question.
Is there a point of diminishing returns?
Does a head rest do more than simply provide a place for the head to rest?
Inquiring minds want to know!
Besides, speed is fun.
More speed is more funner.
-Steve