No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroKindle Customer
Comentado en Australia el 20 de marzo de 2025
great finish and very comfortable.
Klausi
Comentado en Alemania el 21 de julio de 2024
Nach jahrelanger Suche endlich den perfekten Sattel gefunden nicht zu weich und nicht zu hart....sehr zufrieden und ich habe von billig bis sehr teuer alles probiert!
Bob
Comentado en Canadá el 12 de diciembre de 2023
This is my second WTB Pure. I have been moving my old Pure V saddle from one bike to another for 20 years and am still using it on my hybrid flat bar city bike. Through rain and shine, touring and trail riding, the saddle remains in great condition and has always felt great. I don’t think it will ever wear out.So when I bought my new carbon gravel bike I thought a new WTB Pure Cromoly would be a good choice. And it is. The shape is nicely contoured with a drop nose and raised rear so you can move back and forth for climbing, sprinting and cruising long distances. It is narrow enough to avoid thigh chafing and the ergonomic cut out works well for my old sensitive parts. The padding is firm but soft in all the right places. Compared to all the racing saddles I’ve owned this Pure relief.I have WTB Rocket titanium on my road bike and it is also perfect for me. All of my WTB saddles are very well made of high quality materials. There has never been a problem with any of them. I’m fussy about my equipment and after 60 years of cycling I have found WTB saddles to be my favourite.
Vince Salvino
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de octubre de 2023
I was torn between the WTB Volt or the Pure, and ended up getting both. So this review will be a bit of a comparison between them.I ride a hybrid bike (Marin Fairfax) and mainly like to do long road rides (20-60 miles). Normally, after 2+ hours in the saddle, I start to get a bit sore or get a bit of chaffing. According to WTB, less padding is better for extended periods of time. This is counter intuitive, but having already tried adding more padding with no results, I figured I'd try it out.I'll jump to the chase: for my scenario, the Volt is actually more comfortable than the Pure. Only because it has less padding and is slightly smaller. That being said the Pure is a very nice and comfortable saddle, but not for endurance, at least on my butt.The Pure is very similar to the Volt. The pure has maybe 1/4 inch more padding, is slightly more curved, and is just a tiny bit longer and wider than the Volt. The extra size and padding does in fact make it more comfortable on shorter rides. It feels great, and the curve gives you multiple positions to sit in. Scoot up, and you're sitting more upright, nestled in the curve. Scoot back, and you're leaning forward, sitting on the thicker padded back end of the saddle. The same applies for the Volt, only the shape is slightly different.The only CONS of the Pure vs the Volt are that because it is slightly wider and slightly more padding, the extra amount of seat can start to chafe after a few hours. Turns out that more padding does in fact increase comfort in the short-haul but reduces comfort in the long-haul. Thank you WTB for educating your customers!So my takeaway is: if you're looking for more of a comfortable seat, and don't usually ride more than 2 hours, go for the Pure. If you're more into distance/touring then the Volt will probably serve you better. I'm keeping the Pure and putting it on a fixer-upper mountain bike and I think it will work perfectly for that; but leaving the Volt on my main bike.
1GoodDog
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de septiembre de 2020
Everyone's shape and size is different, so your mileage will vary. But I tried lots and lots of saddles from Bontrager and WTB in various sizes and thicknesses before settling on the Pure. I use it on both my Santa Cruz Tallboy C S and my Trek Checkpoint SL7. It's comfortable, and the titanium version is reasonably lightweight.
Productos recomendados