SunnyD wrote:Ahhh okay the big change is to make the trade off between stability and sitting on your junk!
I think I'm going to try and get that effect by building the seat up a bit to remove the 'sharpness' of the tip of the saddle.
I have a half pack of these really cheap synthetic
chamois for clean-up around the house. I think I'm going to cut/shape at least one layer to sandwich between the top fabric and the foam base. It should suck up the moisture and give me extra padding.
My seat can't get any worse than it is either way. I go for anything more than few kms and the next day is agony.
A few ideas on saddle discomfort.
How long have you been riding? Nobody feels great the first few rides, it's just not a part of your anatomy you sit on, unless you ride.
How's your flexibility? If you're tight, your pelvis can roll forward onto the perineum, instead of sitting back on the sit bones or ischial tuberosities.
After that is position. If your saddle is too high, you could be rocking side to side, causing friction. Saddle too far back? Bars too far away? All can cause pressure on the perineum.
Saddle shape matters. There are lots of shapes available now, for most types of pelvic architecture. Flat top, sway back, centre channels, flattish side to side, round side to side, wide nose, narrow nose, padded nose, little padding etc. Longish discussion here about pelvic shape and saddles, among other things:
http://www.stevehoggbikefitting.com/blo ... smp-seats/
Then there's good old leather, like Brooks, which some randonneurs use; it molds (eventually) to your shape.
Building up the chamois might work, but too much material can bind and wrinkle and make the problem worse.
You could always try that old tour de france rider trick. Put a raw steak in your shorts!