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Moots straight-lace seatpost

MSRP $
# of Reviews 16
Average Rating 4.31/5
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Submitted by Andreas a Cross Country Rider from Feldafing
Date Reviewed: November 10, 2008
Favorite Trail:yes
Duration Product Used:More than 3 years
Purchased At:Rabbit
Strengths:A follow up. defined flex, durability (in use for 10 years now with 220 to 260 lbs to keep up with moderate XC riding, many times changes of saddle), looks, titanium
Weaknesses:price
Similar Products Used:Thompson (very good also), NC17, ROOX
Bike Setup:TREK OCLV 9900 for some years, the frame is retired now. Now doing service in a Marin Bear Valley ldt. ed.
Bottom Line:No complaints here. Does proud an reliable service under a heavy rider. Changing the saddle seems a bit adventurous at first, but the clamp mechs hold out. The defined flex you get is very wellcome. Noi sliding. Was expensive, but is a part I would buy ANY time again.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Mike a Racer from Fort Worth, TX
Date Reviewed: March 12, 2007
Duration Product Used:2 Years
Price Paid: $80.00
Purchased At:used
Strengths:nice ti...and made a surprising difference in ride smoothness....had a cheapo $10 stem before in a 4k+ plus bike. Always thought how much of a difference could it make?
Weaknesses:The aluminum seat clamps that slide in the post fracture.....I called Moots and they said this is normal, sometimes they only last a season...$12 please. I was shocked, pay this price for a ti stem and have a flimsy part the fails routinely...and from Moots, my expectation being I buy Moots it will last a lifetime
Bike Setup:Vamoots, Dura Ace
Bottom Line:I really like the post, but the seat clamps make this a no go for me next time around.
Value Rating:3Overall Rating:2

Submitted by Anthony a Cross Country Rider from Portland, OR
Date Reviewed: January 27, 2007
Favorite Trail:Smith Creek
Duration Product Used:1 Year
Price Paid: $120.00
Purchased At:moots
Strengths:Beautiful welds, very strong, looks nice, feels like it absorbs bumps.
Weaknesses:The seat will not stay at the correct angle for the duration of a ride. No matter what I try or how tight I get the bolts, the seat angle always adjusts so the tip of the seat angles up, not comfortable. Plus theres always the jokes on the trail from people who see it. Maybe there is a function to the seat clamp, but I find it to be a pain. Its a lot of effort to switch out sadles or clean the insides. A 15$ tool in addition to a 120$ post? No thanks.
Similar Products Used:Thompson
Bike Setup:Custom Ti Carl Strong frame.
Bottom Line:You would think that for 120$ you would get a perfect stem, but thats not the case. Its obnoxious to have to readjust the seat angle in the middle of rides and after rides simply because it wont stay put. I'm 6'4 and 175 pounds, so not like Im pushing the stem to its support limits. After spending this money, I wish Id gone with dean or a thompson. If your going to pay a premium price why should you have to deal with design flaws? Sure it looks beautiful and the welds are great, but in the end I wouldnt recomend this post to anyone.
Value Rating:2Overall Rating:2

Submitted by Rain Man a Cross Country Rider from Australia
Date Reviewed: July 27, 2006
Favorite Trail:Local singletracks.
Duration Product Used:6 months
Price Paid: $120.00
Purchased At:Moots
Strengths:Ti. Smooth clean and bright. Fantastic welds. Innovative clamping system. Very light and strong. Has some flex which soaks up the trail vibes.
Weaknesses:None that I can find...maybe price.
Similar Products Used:Thomson, Easton, Bontrager, etc..etc..
Bike Setup:NinerBikes SIR 9 SS.
Bottom Line:This Ti post is a lovely looking creation from the masters of Ti, Moots. The welds are incredibly good, smooth and uniform.
I like the innovative clamping system, it is simple and strong, and never moves once tightened down.

Once you change your saddle a couple of times, the clamping system is very easy to use.

Like all Moots products, it is expensive, but well worth the $$$'s in my opinion. The post gives a nice soft ride on a hard tailed SS bike with the natural flex of good titanium.

Coupled with a good Ti-railed saddle, the ride is very smooth indeed.

I have no complaints at all, I love the look and feel of Ti, and the Moots seatpost is a very fine example of what a seatpost should be.

This very good seatpost is one of the best you can buy.

I give it 5/5.


R.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Cliff a Cross Country Rider from Wellington, NZ via Poto and San Juan Trail
Date Reviewed: July 9, 2006
Favorite Trail:Hermosa Creek
Duration Product Used:3 months
Price Paid: $135.00
Purchased At:BeyondBikes.com
Strengths:Craftsmanship, Ti, simplicity, durability, flex, weight
Weaknesses:zero
Similar Products Used:Over the years: Control Tech, Kalloy, Ritchey, Thompson, various alloy and carbon Bontragers, RockShox suspension post
Bike Setup:29er hardtail, GF Paragon, mix of SRAM and Shimano, NoTubes wheels, Maxxis tires
Bottom Line:I was considering going back to a sus post now that I'm back on a hardtail. Once I thought about it I knew a quality Ti post would provide the bump softening I was looking for without the weight penalty of a sus post. The Moots delivered. LIGHT WEIGHT AND SMOOTH.

WITH REGARDS TO THE SEAT CLAMP - I FOUND IT TO BE QUITE EASY TO CHANGE SADDLES. REMOVE THE BOLTS AND ALL YOU NEED IS A SCREW DRIVER TO SPRED THE CLAMP OPEN - THE DIRECTIONS WERE EASY TO FOLLOW AND INSTALLING MY SADDLE TOOK LESS THAN 2 MIN.S [YES I TIMED IT - AS I HAD READ A FEW REVIEWS INDICATING THAT IT WOULD BE DIFFICULT].

Buy it if you want the best.

Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Brian a Cross Country Rider from Yakima, WA, USA
Date Reviewed: March 31, 2005
Duration Product Used:6 months
Purchased At:150
Strengths:Duh....it's ti
Weaknesses:it's a complete pain in the arse to swap out saddles
Similar Products Used:Thomson, Easton, Titus
Bike Setup:Moots Smoothie, full XTR, moots ti stem, moots ti seatpost and new specialized alias saddle, FSA carbon bar
Bottom Line:Bottom line is this seatpost is the best you can buy. It's light, bombproof, and of course...it's titanium. I'll give you all some advice on swapping out the saddles. First, buy the spreading tool (available from moots for around $15); you can probably find a similar tool at your local home depot. The moots design is an efficient one piece design with an aluminum insert. Use the spreaders to open the gap in the seatpost as much as possible. Have an assistant push the upper part of the aluminum insert that rests on the rails over the rails freeing the saddle rails from the post. You can easily remove it from this point. Reverse the process to put the new saddle on. Make sure it's a saddle you really like so you only have to do this once. Other than that this saddle is great!
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Matthew Tryon a Cross Country Rider from San Diego, CA
Date Reviewed: December 9, 2004
Favorite Trail:any that will take me
Duration Product Used:6 months
Price Paid: $150.00
Purchased At:moots.com
Strengths:strong, light, forgiving, absorbs vibration very well.
Weaknesses:adjustability can be a PITA...
Similar Products Used:Thomson
Bike Setup:Kish Ti, shimano, hayes...yada, yada, yada
Bottom Line:I happen to be one of those people who believes ti is the greatest thing on the face of the planet. If there's a place to put ti on my bike, it going there... For a long time it didn't make a difference to me, but the fact that I don't feel beaten up after every ride makes a difference, especially when my @$$ is involved....IMHO. I noticed a difference immediately, but then again I'm biased. Great modulus of elasticity, and it's held up after some brutal riding in the sierras. I recommend it...
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Mibo a Cross Country Rider from UK
Date Reviewed: January 10, 2004
Duration Product Used:6 months
Purchased At:Moots
Strengths:Craftsmanship, holds saddle securely, quite light, you buy it because its TI, not to lose the equivalent weight of a chocolate bar!!!
Weaknesses:Non, just the fiddly clamping system.
Similar Products Used:Thomson Elite
Bike Setup:Cove Hummer
Bottom Line:Beautifully crafted post, very strong & light, probably the nicest seatpost ever to be seen. Fitting the saddle between the clamp plates was a bit annoying, trying to remove it p*ssed me right off. Swapped back over to another Thomson just because my saddle is on and off all the time (cleaning a constantly filthy bike!)and can't be doing with messing around with the clamp system more than once!!
Value Rating:3Overall Rating:3

Submitted by Marjan Tkavc a Cross Country Rider from Slovenia
Date Reviewed: July 28, 2003
Duration Product Used:2 Years
Price Paid: $200.00
Purchased At:mountainbikes.net
Strengths:Titanium, simple design, light weight, durability,
absorbing imapcts.
Weaknesses:None
Similar Products Used:Titec, Tranz-x and some more no-names
Bike Setup:Rewel Ti, Marzocchi, xtr/xt
Bottom Line:It is quite big bucks you pay, but it is well worth it.
I like the looks of it. It is simple and powerful.
It really absorbs vibration and imapcts. In combination
with my WTB Laser V Stealth it gives me very nice plush ride.
When I first bought it the diameter was wrong being too small. And because the customer support at MOOTS is great they replaced it even after 6 month of use. It was sinking
into the frame all the time and I blamed the frame. Anyway now that I got the right diameter the seatpost is great.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Andreas Klauser a Cross Country Rider from Feldafing
Date Reviewed: June 10, 2002
Duration Product Used:More than 3 years
Purchased At:Rabit Herrsching
Strengths:keeps going, else look below
Weaknesses:none whatever
Similar Products Used:some in my two other bikes
Bike Setup:Trek OCLV
Bottom Line:It an update (see below). I can't kill this thing, and if I cannot, you can't either (self being 240 lbs). It is really amazing. It was extra expensive when I bought it, but it is well worth the price. Don't be repelled by myths of flexiness of Ti posts. Highly, most highly recommended.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by yuri a Cross Country Rider from Ottawa
Date Reviewed: July 26, 2001
Favorite Trail:foreplay
Duration Product Used:More than 3 years
Purchased At:UIC
Strengths:Very light, very simple design, flawless manufacturing
Weaknesses:Cost?
Similar Products Used:Dean, Thomson
Bike Setup:DeKerf Team WCS
Bottom Line:An excellent design that, if you have the cash, is well worth the cost. After bending seatposts for a couple of seasons I spent the money to upgrade to the Moots and have never looked back. This seatpost is one of the lightest designs out there and is so well made it will likely survive WWIII with Keith Richards and the roaches...

I had some slippage with the seat rails after a season and a half but after running a file across the two Aluminum "clamps" I have had no more problems. The clamping mechanism is dead simple and, after the first time you put a seat into it, you won't have any problems installing or removing saddles.

The seatpost does absorb some trail shock and vibration compared to something like a Thomson but don't expect to get the equivalent of a soft-tail or suspension seatpost!
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Dave a Racer from Springfield MO
Date Reviewed: February 6, 2001
Duration Product Used:1 Year
Price Paid: $100.00
Strengths:This is a great seatpost! I raced a full year on it over a variety of trails. It did a great job dampening vibrations and is very strong. (I weigh 186). If you are going to buy a post, don't waist your money on a carbon, this post out performs them in every aspect.
Weaknesses:None
Similar Products Used:Thomson, Easton
Bike Setup:Cannondale F3000SL, Fatty Ultra, Mavic USB Tubless, Full XTR.
Bottom Line:Buy it!
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Pascal NEPPER a Weekend Warrior from Luxembourg (Europe)
Date Reviewed: August 21, 2000
Favorite Trail:Street, trials
Duration Product Used:2 Years
Price Paid: $130.00
Purchased At:CBO
Strengths:Very light
380 mm long !
Strong enough
Vibration dampening
Weaknesses:Price, but you get what you pay for
Similar Products Used:Al seatposts from several brands
Bike Setup:Merlin Taïga 15" for trials, jumps,... . XTR, Mavic, Race Face, ...
Bottom Line:This one is one of the lightest AND strongest, + it dampens small shocks ! Forget the price and go for it.
It's a better choice than buying seatposts that are uncomfortable, heavy, and bend.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by hugh a Weekend Warrior from nm
Date Reviewed: July 31, 2000
Duration Product Used:More than 3 years
Strengths:light
excellent craftmanship
dampens
precision work, fits moots frames perfectly.
Weaknesses:none
Similar Products Used:lots
Bike Setup:moots..have multiple moots seatposts (laidback and straight)on different bikes
Bottom Line:light, vibration damping, functional post, holds seat well.
beautiful. best seatpost ever used in 35 years pscyling.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Andrew Klauser a Cross Country Rider from Munich
Date Reviewed: June 23, 2000
Duration Product Used:2 Years
Strengths:Cool design/looks(Titanium still is the most attractive material to build anything for a bike), comfy dampening.
Weaknesses:none
Similar Products Used:Syncros Ti seatpost.
Bike Setup:TREK 9900 OCLV Pro Issue.
Bottom Line:I am a rather heavy guy (240lbs) and I have the Moots Seatpost in use since more than two years now. The dampening of short vibrations is much better than with an alu post (have used the moots in a 8900 Trek too, which has no such good frame dampening like the oclv). The Moots Ti seat post performed flawlessly till now, though I have replaced the saddle repeatedly: The clamp mechanism nourishes the wildest doubts as to its endurability at first, but, as I have said, it just holds out.
Value Rating:5Overall Rating:5

Submitted by Shirtless Idiot a cross-country rider from Boston
Date Reviewed: September 28, 1998
Bottom Line:
It appears to be a nice and light design, but it was a bit awkward having to pry apart the head to slide clamps over the rails of the saddle. How does this post perform? probably about the same as anything else out there of comparable weight. The problem is that I could never get one that was the right size. My bike takes a 27.0 seatpost, but the 27.0 Moots post that I got initially did not fit and felt a little too big. I decided on a whim to try it on my Breezer which takes a 27.2 post, and it fit perfectly. I contacted them about it and they told me to try some other posts in my frame and to get the seatpost measured by a pair of accurate calipers. Well, other posts fit perferctly and the guy at the bike store told me it was closer to a 27.2 than a 27.0, so I sent it in and got a brand new 27.0 with no further questions asked. New post, same problem. I had a pair of calipers, and though it didn't have a metric scale, it seemed to measure to be 27.0 mm, but it failed the real test. I got sick of it and just bought a Thomson that fit as I thought seatposts should fit. Customer service was good, but ultimately the product they sent me was something that I couldn't use.
Overall Rating:2






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