behind the seat hydration
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Moderators: k9car363, alicefoeller | Reply |
2016-05-26 12:37 PM |
304 | Subject: behind the seat hydration Does anyone prefer one brand over another for a 2 bottle system? C02 and fill components attached or not to system or in the bag? Are cages more specific to this design verses frame mount? what's you preference and why? |
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2016-05-26 1:14 PM in reply to: 0 |
Extreme Veteran 717 Chicago, USA | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration Lots of ways to carry bottles. But if low drag is your goal, using 1 bottle, getting the bottle super close to your saddle, and getting the bottle as close to horizontal as possible is more optimal. Kind of like this: Edited by DarkSpeedWorks 2016-05-26 1:16 PM |
2016-05-26 1:21 PM in reply to: DarkSpeedWorks |
304 | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration I noticed the blue tape or is that a rubber band type material? What was result of being almost parallel to the ground with bumping? Who a gorilla cage have worked better for grip? |
2016-05-26 1:32 PM in reply to: dworth |
Master 2406 Bellevue, WA | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration I've used an XLab behind the system for years. I have a new one that fits the seatpost for my P3C quite well. The cages are identical for frame vs. behind the seat. Back when I set mine up, two behind the seat was all the rage. Now it's one behind the seat or none, and a between the aerobars setup. What I use these days is a between-the-bars Speedfill (http://invisciddesign.com/Z4.htm) and my XLab behind-the-seat two cage setup. The right cage holds my Gatorade, the left cage holds my spare tire and tube and stuff rubber banded to it, and the Speedfill is water. I think I have a spare XLab behind-the-seat holder that bolts to your seat. If you want it, PM me your address and I'll mail it to you. No cages included. |
2016-05-26 3:12 PM in reply to: brucemorgan |
Member 1748 Exton, PA | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration I have profile design 2 behind the seat small bag tucks up underneath the seat tight, and can screw in 4 co tubes. I went with double holder so I can do HIM races unsupported. 4 bottles on board and gu's, no slowing down to pick up hydration. Also minimal slowing down during IM. |
2016-05-26 5:02 PM in reply to: 0 |
Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration Gotta experiment with what works. I used the DSW set up pictured above for a couple seasons, tucked in tight, but had some issues that negated the aero benefits. First, the angle of the cage would hold a regular water bottle fine, but the plastic store bought bottles that they hand out on course would tend to eject in bad roads, train tracks, etc. And this was using gorilla cages. At NOLA 70.3 I lost one bottle and there was not another aid station for 20+ miles, came back to haunt me on the run big time. Plus you risk a penalty if you choose not to pick it up (or don't even know it's gone). Second, due to my fit I could reach back and get the bottle while in aero, but no way I could put it back in without sitting up. Even sitting up, trying to get it back in behind me the bottle would sometimes collapse, and I'd be sitting up way to long dealing with it. So it didn't really work for me. The extra material like in the pic may have solved one issue but not the other. This year I went back to the x lab double bottle set up (I only run one cage on it for 70.3 as it's just water I get at aid stations) Not as aero, but bottles don't eject and I can take the bottle out and put back in while still in aero (although losing some benefit by reaching back, not like sitting up). Now run two bottles as I am going to be IM training. I have all my flat kit on the bike in a modified Torhans frame bottle Also have used metal cages BTS but one year at Widlflower got of the bike and the whole thing had just broken off due to metal fatigue, probably from trying to make it tighter. Use gorilla cages I've picked up over the years Edited by ChrisM 2016-05-26 5:04 PM |
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2016-05-30 11:29 PM in reply to: dworth |
Member 566 | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration Cages definitely matter more in this setup. There are two ways to go to avoid launching bottles: 1. A cage with a stronger grip (ex. Xlab Gorilla) 2. A cage that ois designed so it doesn't "open" on bumps (Specialize Ribcage, Blackburn Slick) Personally, I go route 2. If you are using a single bottle, zip tie the cage per DSW. If you are going with two bottles, Xlab and Profile both make good options. You can use one of the two bottles for storing a flat kit. |
2016-05-31 8:19 AM in reply to: dworth |
Extreme Veteran 717 Chicago, USA | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration Originally posted by dworth I noticed the blue tape or is that a rubber band type material? What was result of being almost parallel to the ground with bumping? Who a gorilla cage have worked better for grip? That is not actually my bike, so I am not sure exactly what the blue stuff is. Looks a bit like tape. And, yes, there are several good cages out there to choose from if you want to mount your bottle similarly. |
2016-05-31 10:22 AM in reply to: DarkSpeedWorks |
194 , North Carolina | Subject: RE: behind the seat hydration I go the zip tie route, but with my old saddle I was able to get it a little more angled up so It wasn't hard to reach at all. I switched to an ISM this year and it's a bit harder to get set right. I'm still playing with it. I have also used the Profile design 2 bottle system (the cheaper version that goes around your seat post and not the saddle rails). I liked it but don't need 2 bottles so I went with the BTA mount... also zip ties. |
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