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Date: 26 Feb 2007 15:43:57
From: Buck
Subject: Seat materials
Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was speaking to
a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never suffered it,
the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that works both
ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and disadvantages?

--
Three wheels good, two wheels ok

www.catrike.co.uk





 
Date: 09 Mar 2007 17:21:21
From: Johnny Sunset aka Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Seat materials
On Feb 26, 9:43 am, Buck <SPAMTRAP...@trikesandstuff.DOTco.DOTuk >
wrote:
> Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was speaking to
> a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never suffered it,
> the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that works both
> ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and disadvantages?

The 1999 yellow RANS seat foam will hold about a liter of water and
takes several days to air dry, even after repeated wringing by hand.
It will appear to be dry sooner, but riding a couple of miles will
reveal this not to be true.

--
Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia
The weather is here, wish you were beautiful





 
Date: 26 Feb 2007 12:20:20
From: Joel
Subject: Re: Seat materials
Buck wrote:
> Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was
> speaking to
> a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never
> suffered it,
> the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that
> works both
> ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and disadvantages?
>
Buck, the Venitis or Air Mesh seat foam is cool in summer and water does
not absorb in to the material.


  
Date: 09 Mar 2007 09:06:30
From: gotbent
Subject: WAS Re: Seat materials TOPIC DRIFT SUPRACOR

"Joel" <joelw135atcomcast.net > wrote in message
news:gN6dneEGPo9Ii37YnZ2dnUVZ_sbinZ2d@comcast.com...
> Buck wrote:
>> Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was
>> speaking to
>> a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never suffered
>> it,
>> the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that works
>> both
>> ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and
>> disadvantages?
>>
> Buck, the Venitis or Air Mesh seat foam is cool in summer and water does
> not absorb in to the material.

Joel, IIRC you were in the process of contacting Supracor about alternate
size sheets and direct purchase. Did they reply to you and could you share
the information?
gotbent, now even more bent. Maybe I should change my cognomon to gotbents.



--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com



   
Date: 09 Mar 2007 12:01:47
From: Joel
Subject: Re: WAS Re: Seat materials TOPIC DRIFT SUPRACOR
gotbent wrote:
> "Joel" <joelw135atcomcast.net> wrote in message
> news:gN6dneEGPo9Ii37YnZ2dnUVZ_sbinZ2d@comcast.com...
>> Buck wrote:
>>> Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was
>>> speaking to
>>> a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never suffered
>>> it,
>>> the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that works
>>> both
>>> ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and
>>> disadvantages?
>>>
>> Buck, the Venitis or Air Mesh seat foam is cool in summer and water does
>> not absorb in to the material.
>
> Joel, IIRC you were in the process of contacting Supracor about alternate
> size sheets and direct purchase. Did they reply to you and could you share
> the information?
> gotbent, now even more bent. Maybe I should change my cognomon to gotbents.
>
>
>
They never got back to me and I tried to contact them again with no luck.


 
Date: 26 Feb 2007 16:25:05
From: Peter Clinch
Subject: Re: Seat materials
Buck wrote:
> Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was
> speaking to a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but
> mine never suffered it, the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let
> water through but that works both ways, what type is your seat and
> what are the advantages and disadvantages?

The HPVel Airflow isn't too bad in this respect. When I'm riding it I
keep the cushion out of the worst of the rain, and if I'm parking and
the skies are very suspiciously grey I just take the seat cushion off.
Unless I forget to take it off when it's parked in the rain I've never
got conspicuously wet from the seat, or at least not so I'd notice more
than the general wetness falling on me anyway...

Pete.
--
Peter Clinch Medical Physics IT Officer
Tel 44 1382 660111 ext. 33637 Univ. of Dundee, Ninewells Hospital
Fax 44 1382 640177 Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK
net p.j.clinch@dundee.ac.uk http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/


 
Date: 26 Feb 2007 11:00:02
From: Curtis L. Russell
Subject: Re: Seat materials
On Mon, 26 Feb 2007 15:43:57 GMT, Buck
<SPAMTRAPian@trikesandstuff.DOTco.DOTuk > wrote:

>Who here has a problem with seat foam soaking up rain water, I was speaking to
>a customer who had this issue on a Challenge bent but mine never suffered it,
>the mesh seats on the Catrikes obviously let water through but that works both
>ways, what type is your seat and what are the advantages and disadvantages?

The Vision seat had the capability to really soak up water, but it was
only a real issue maybe twice in a decade, when we had a deluge bad
enough for the foam to fill up. My Linear that I used for commuting
also could have had a problem, but the cushion was only Velcro'd on,
so I took it to and from work (Linear was locked up at the train
station).

My experience that it takes a lot of rain for the cushion to saturate.

Curtis L. Russell
Odenton, MD (USA)
Just someone on two wheels...