@Greg Watts find the saddle with the lowest stack height. So the absolute minimum distance from rails to the saddle / seat.
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Right, @Rob Rides EMTB. A noble quest, and one the industry has collectively decided not to help with by, you know, actually publishing the data.@Greg Watts find the saddle with the lowest stack height. So the absolute minimum distance from rails to the saddle / seat.
| Saddle | Stack (approx) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Tune KommVor / KommVor Plus | ~32mm | Consistently the lowest cited |
| Selle Flite Ti (original) | 35-40mm | Newer versions are taller |
| Selle Italia SLR / C64 Carbon | ~35-40mm | Varies by year and model |
| Nukeproof Sam Hill Enduro | ~35mm | Rails repositioned ~8mm lower than standard Horizon |
| SMP (padding-less) | ~35mm | Unique shape complicates measurement |
| WTB Silverado | ~43-45mm | Raised rear end, measure at clamp zone |
| Nukeproof Vector DH | ~44mm | - |
| SQLab 60X | ~40mm | Useable, padded |
| Chromag Trailmaster | ~60mm | Avoid if stack is the goal |
anything from ergon?Right, @Rob Rides EMTB. A noble quest, and one the industry has collectively decided not to help with by, you know, actually publishing the data.
Manufacturers simply do not quote saddle stack figures, so everything comes from community-sourced measurement campaigns. Here's what the collective has dug up: The numbers that keep coming up from across forums, rail-centre to top of saddle at the clamp point:
Saddle Stack (approx) Notes Tune KommVor / KommVor Plus ~32mm Consistently the lowest cited Selle Flite Ti (original) 35-40mm Newer versions are taller Selle Italia SLR / C64 Carbon ~35-40mm Varies by year and model Nukeproof Sam Hill Enduro ~35mm Rails repositioned ~8mm lower than standard Horizon SMP (padding-less) ~35mm Unique shape complicates measurement WTB Silverado ~43-45mm Raised rear end, measure at clamp zone Nukeproof Vector DH ~44mm - SQLab 60X ~40mm Useable, padded Chromag Trailmaster ~60mm Avoid if stack is the goal
The Tune KommVor and KommVor Plus come in at about 32mm, which is about as low as anyone's measured on a production saddle with rails intact.
The Nukeproof Sam Hill was specifically redesigned with rails repositioned approximately 8mm lower than the standard Horizon to let Sam use the longest dropper possible, which makes it a purpose-built low-stack option.
@Bogdan_CH on the forum reckons the Prolongo Proxim W450 is notably low compared to other options he's tried, worth adding to the list. @crazyknowledge has a stash of the Sam Hill saddles from his Kenevo SL days and may be able to get you a measured number if you want to pin it down precisely.
The Selle Italia SLR C64 Carbon is also cited around 35mm, which puts it in the same bracket as the Sam Hill. Title SD1 keeps coming up in our own thread too - @Polar's been running one and is evangelical about it, though I don't have a precise stack measurement for it yet.
If you're chasing absolute minimum: Tune KommVor is the answer on paper. If you want something trail-worthy with a verified low-stack design intent: Sam Hill Enduro, if you can still find one.
Ergon don't publish stack height data either, because apparently the saddle industry's stance on useful specifications is "no." Their SM and SR lines are ergonomically focused, with a fairly generous profile due to the padding and relief channel construction. Not a low-stack option.anything from ergon?
How about Trek? The Verse is one that I like because its quite small in size, easy to get out the way.Ergon don't publish stack height data either, because apparently the saddle industry's stance on useful specifications is "no." Their SM and SR lines are ergonomically focused, with a fairly generous profile due to the padding and relief channel construction. Not a low-stack option.
For the quest at hand, Ergon isn't your answer. Their saddles are built around comfort engineering: OrthoCell padding, relief channels, shaped foam. All of that adds height. You'd be looking at 45mm+ territory, roughly comparable to the WTB Silverado end of my previous table, not the Tune KommVor end.
If low stack is the primary goal, Ergon is essentially the wrong brand to be asking about. They've optimised for everything except minimising rail-to-top distance.
Trek (well, Bontrager) don't publish stack height on the Verse either, because why would they make our lives easier. The Verse Short is the one you'd want for this purpose givenHow about Trek? The Verse is one that I like because its quite small in size, easy to get out the way.
Have you been sniffing your socks @gregwats because I don't have or ever tried that saddle, I'm into comfort therfore Ergon SM E-Mountain Core Prime is what I run but I do run a Title AH1 35 50 bar.Title SD1 keeps coming up in our own thread too - @Polar's been running one and is evangelical about it
My fault entirely, @Polar. I plucked your name out of thin air and attached it to the wrong saddle. Corrected and noted.Have you been sniffing your socks @gregwats because I don't have or ever tried that saddle, I'm into comfort therfore Ergon SM E-Mountain Core Prime is what I use but I do use Title AH1 35 50 bar.