So, while riding Roosevelt west over Canal street and dealing with all of the semi-construction stuff -- the screw which attaches the saddle to my seat post, broke spontaneously causing my saddle to flip up (almost grievous harm to future progeny potential). This was compounded by my reaction to sit down on the now nonexistent saddle and have nightmarish thoughts about Matthew Long.
There is no rust as far as I can tell on the screw. I don't think anyone was trying to steal my saddle and I don't think anyone tried to sabotage my bike.
SO, just curious, has this ever happened to anyone else? And if not specifically a screw breaking on a saddle attachment, then some other act that had you wondering if your bike was possessed and out to harm you.
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Not an uncommon failure, especially if you have your saddle set to the extreme of fore or aft adjustment and, from the marks on your saddles rails, you have the saddle all the way back on the rails; was it past the 'max' mark on the saddle rails?
It happened to me too, just like Dug said.
I'm alive....still doing my best or sorta best to stay safe.
Ride on, Johnny Blaze....
It did not happen for no reason, it happened because of leverage and an improperly positioned saddle.
There are bikes that have been on the road for a decade or more and have not had that bolt break.
Tom A.K. said:
Possessed. Well, we are nearing the Satan worshiping holiday. Maybe it's out to get you. BOOO HA HA ! Seriously, metal does fatigue (soften over time due to stress) and can fracture unpredictably. It can happen for no reason. Right, Satan?
I've had my seat post crack mid-ride, and then a couple years later the frame cracked where the top tube meets the seat tube. I was riding on it like that for while and didn't notice until the seat post cracked too. Got a new frame out of it via warranty though
I had saddle rail break right where rail is supported by the back end of the saddle rail binder. Fortunately the saddle could be shifted forward an inch to where the break was in the middle of the rail binder. It held long enough for me to get 25 mi to the next town with a bike shop.
My bike fixed itself one time when some of my enemies bent the frame. Then it killed them.
Yes, this happened to me! It was awful! Had just gotten on my bike and crossing La Salle bridge. Went to sit down and saddle provided no resistance, so I fell off backwards. Knee landed squarely in the bridge grating; not pretty. I ordered the highest grade stainless bolts of the same dimensions from McMaster to replace and now this joint is part of my standard pre-ride checks. Ride safe!
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