I've got an "07" K12GT with a Bill Mayer leather front seat. The seat is firm, very smooth and slick. It's a constant battle to keep from sliding forward. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jeff Phan
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I've got an "07" K12GT with a Bill Mayer leather front seat. The seat is firm, very smooth and slick. It's a constant battle to keep from sliding forward. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jeff Phan
[QUOTE=jphan;432135]I've got an "07" K12GT with a Bill Mayer leather front seat. The seat is firm, very smooth and slick. It's a constant battle to keep from sliding forward. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jeff Phan[/QUOTE]
Please don't take this as a 'smart remark' but you don't have any Armor All or similar clean and shine product on it do you? I did that only once on my /5 and almost became a Castrando! I wonder if the riding pants have anything to do with it? -Bob
You might want to try some sort of but pad on the seat such as a sheepskin. Hopefully that should solve the problem as well as make riding more enjoyable......tkm
There is a boot weatherproofing product called SnoSeal, made mostly of beeswax and some lanolin. It will seal and treat the leather, give it an armorall type shine, but the finish is not slippery, it seems to add traction to the seating surface, especially with a textile riding suit. Rub it on the seat, heat with a hair dryer until it liquifies, wipe off the surplus.
Works very well to seal stitched seams in a seat, preventing the seat 'sponge' effect in rainy weather.
No Armorall from me. I bought the bike used with the seat. It doesn't look like any kind of polish has been applied. I wear Olympia mesh over pants.
I'm going to look into the sheep skin pad and SnoSeal. I'm concerned the SnoSeal will leave a residue on my riding pants?
[QUOTE=jphan;432456]No Armorall from me. I bought the bike used with the seat. It doesn't look like any kind of polish has been applied. I wear Olympia mesh over pants.
I'm going to look into the sheep skin pad and SnoSeal. I'm concerned the SnoSeal will leave a residue on my riding pants?[/QUOTE]
No residue. After you have heated and liquified the SnoSeal, wipe awae all the excess, the seat will buff to a nice shine that is not slippery. An application seems to last 6-8 weeks.
ho ho.... the residue could be an interesting conversation piece :ha Seriously though, I would work with the condition of the surface. While the sheepskin is a cozy option I also found that I gained about an inch of distance up. It may make a difference to you when loaded (the bike I mean). -Bob
Hey Guys, thanks for the helpful information!
Jeff Phan