It isn't just a matter of IBR participation or just for LD feats of super human riding. It is a matter of paying the money
once and
never having to think about seat comfort again for the entire life of the bike, or longer for those who have transferred their 2nd gen Russell seats to their third gen bikes. I seldom cover "long distances" but I often spend all day in the saddle. Being able to ride all day long, stopping just for gas and photos along the way, and ending the day with no seat comfort concerns the entire time (even looking forward to getting back on the road the next day) isn't worth $700. It's priceless!!
Rick Mayer makes custom seats too. I have first hand (or is it first butt?) experience that they do not compare in comfort to a Russell with those big (ugly) wings. The comfort is in those wings, not just in the "custom."
The $700 number for a Russell would be for a dual (both the rider and passenger seat fully shaped and customized) and with the full full leather seat cover at full price. If you do not normally carry a passenger and wanted to go with the vinyl seat covers you can get a Russell solo (front and back recoverd to match) for just $480, and if you are really price conscious and opt to not send the passenger seat in to be recovered with the matching vinyl, it is only $395. Plus, if you get it during one of the annual group buys you can get 10 or 15% off of that. (a 15% discount just ended on 10/13)
@leclairk Yes you can get a Russell without the huge wings. They are called the "
Russell Sport Seat," but you lose out on a great deal of the comfort of the regular Russell Daylong. Yes you can still shift your *** on a Russell Daylong with the big wings, and yes (to the unwritten question) it is a bit more work to do it. But why would you even bother for street riding? Most of your body weight that matters for cornering is up high in your torso. You can shift your torso weight quite easily just moving your head and shoulders to the inside
without sliding your *** across the seat. Most of the Ricky Racer seat sliders that I see out on the road slide their butt to the inside, but then they leave their entire torso centered over the bike with their eyes still level to the horizon. That doesn't work. Get down and kiss the inside mirror and see how much weight gets transferred to the inside
with your butt "still in the pocket."