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-   -   saddle rot - fatal? (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=155579)

bugbear February 6th 07 09:43 AM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.

Bugger.

The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.

Has any seen this before?
Is it fatal?
Any treatments known?

BugBear (not wanting to buy a new saddle)

Paul Boyd February 6th 07 09:53 AM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
bugbear said the following on 06/02/2007 09:43:

Has any seen this before?


Not the "soft and damp" bit, but certainly the green mould bit in the
dim and distant past.

Is it fatal?


Not in my case - I'm still riding it.

Any treatments known?


Wash the mould off and re-wax? I also wax underneath, but you might
want to make sure the leather is dried out first.

--
Paul Boyd
http://www.paul-boyd.co.uk/

Simon Brooke February 6th 07 10:38 AM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
in message , bugbear
') wrote:

I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.

Bugger.

The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.

Has any seen this before?
Is it fatal?
Any treatments known?

BugBear (not wanting to buy a new saddle)


It isn't fatal. Dry the saddle out *slowly*, then treat with plenty of
proofide (Brooks special saddle polish).

If you don't dry the saddle slowly it will become brittle. If you use too
much dubbin or neats foot oil or whatever the saddle will get soft and
will stretch out of shape.

--
(Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/

Morning had broken, and there was nothing we could do but wait
patiently for the RAC to arrive.

Helen Deborah Vecht February 6th 07 11:37 AM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
Simon Brooke typed


in message , bugbear
') wrote:


I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.

Bugger.

The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.

Has any seen this before?
Is it fatal?
Any treatments known?

BugBear (not wanting to buy a new saddle)


It isn't fatal. Dry the saddle out *slowly*, then treat with plenty of
proofide (Brooks special saddle polish).


If you don't dry the saddle slowly it will become brittle. If you use too
much dubbin or neats foot oil or whatever the saddle will get soft and
will stretch out of shape.


I painted the leather saddle on my Pedersen with copper sulphate
(solution made up from) from my brother's chemistry set when it went a
bit mouldy; it wasn't soft though.
I think the saddle's still OK but you'd have to ask Tim Hall...

--
Helen D. Vecht:
Edgware.

Ian Smith February 6th 07 02:16 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
On Tue, 06 Feb, bugbear wrote:

I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.


Mouldy yes, soft and damp, no.

Mine went mouldy when unridden for a couple of years but the physical
properties were unchanged. I wiped the mould off, gave it a good
proofhide and rode it.

The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.


I'd probably not ride it if it's actually done that.
I'd dry it very slowly, then work lots of proofhide in, then hope...

regards, Ian SMith
--
|\ /| no .sig
|o o|
|/ \|

bugbear February 6th 07 04:32 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
Ian Smith wrote:
I'd dry it very slowly, then work lots of proofhide in, then hope...


How slowly is "very"; I've just bought it indoors.

(i.e. no hairdryers or radiators are involved)

Does that sound reasonable?

BugBear

Ian Smith February 6th 07 07:38 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
On Tue, 06 Feb 2007, bugbear wrote:
Ian Smith wrote:
I'd dry it very slowly, then work lots of proofhide in, then hope...


How slowly is "very"; I've just bought it indoors.
(i.e. no hairdryers or radiators are involved)


Yes, I'd just bring it indoors, then put it somewhere away from
radiators, boilers, fires, hot water cylinders and the like.

But I'm only speculating on what I'd do, or what I do for saturated
boots - I don't actually know how a saddle will take it.

regards, Ian SMith
--
|\ /| no .sig
|o o|
|/ \|

Simon Brooke February 6th 07 08:15 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
in message , Ian Smith
') wrote:

On Tue, 06 Feb 2007, bugbear wrote:
Ian Smith wrote:
I'd dry it very slowly, then work lots of proofhide in, then hope...


How slowly is "very"; I've just bought it indoors.
(i.e. no hairdryers or radiators are involved)


Yes, I'd just bring it indoors, then put it somewhere away from
radiators, boilers, fires, hot water cylinders and the like.

But I'm only speculating on what I'd do, or what I do for saturated
boots - I don't actually know how a saddle will take it.


I've had a forty-something year old saddle in this sort of condition. It
never polished back up to glossy, but it became quite usable. I would
advise drying it out in a cool room - not even a centrally heated one. You
really want to give it plenty of time for the water to wick and evaporate
out gently.

--
(Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/

X-no-archive: No, I'm not *that* naive.


Rob Morley February 7th 07 12:23 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
In article ,
bugbear
_trim says...
I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.

Bugger.

The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.

Has any seen this before?


Yes.

Is it fatal?


Probably not.

Any treatments known?

First slacken the tension adjuster. To clean it up give it a good scrub
with saddle soap then let it dry (far corner of the airing cupboard
rather than top of a radiator). When it's bone dry apply lashings of
Proofide and leave to soak in for a while before buffing off the excess.
Re-adjust the tension.

hyweldavies February 13th 07 08:09 PM

saddle rot - fatal?
 
On Feb 7, 12:23 pm, Rob Morley wrote:
In article ,
bugbear
_trim says...

I recently noticed that a brooks professional saddle
on (cough) one of my machines in my garage
has gone bright green with some kind of low-profile
mould.


Bugger.


The saddle is rather soft and damp.
I've removed it and bought it indoors for some
TLC.


Has any seen this before?


Yes.

Is it fatal?


Probably not.

Any treatments known?


First slacken the tension adjuster. To clean it up give it a good scrub
with saddle soap then let it dry (far corner of the airing cupboard
rather than top of a radiator). When it's bone dry apply lashings of
Proofide and leave to soak in for a while before buffing off the excess.
Re-adjust the tension.


I've had the same. Just clean in and put the usual stuff on it.
I didn't, and wouldn't fiddle with the tensioner. Although I've
admittedly not done the experiment, I've heard that they're best left
alone.
At any rate, there's no need.

I did buy a new saddle but that's really only because I wanted a sexy
titanium railed one, and it was 15 years after the mold incident.

Hywel

Hywel



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