Bill Lumberg
Merica
I got my long awaited LAAM seat in today. I had to go to the dealer first to have some left-out fasteners replaced. I suspected that the bike had been reassembled by an 8 year old epileptic with an Ouija board. But I can be a bit judgmental. They were a little defensive, I was short on patience. I just wanted the **** put back on, and their pride in their workmanship and protests that it could not have been their omission fell on deaf ears. But they took care of me, and apologized. And then I called the head mechanic the wrong name on the way out, and he's been my go to guy through a months long warranty problem. WINNING! The bike is in temporary whiplash reprieve, waiting on parts from Yamaha corporate. It will, if ridden, progress to whiplash/unridable over the next few weeks. But by that time, surely the Chinese version of Hogwarts will have sent the long awaited throttle body assemblies in by Owl. Getting some parts from the mothership is like SpaceX ordering up new booster parts.... What?? you want more of those? We just now custom made the first one to build<em class='bbc'> your </em>rocket. Call us in the fall..... All that said, even the jacked up bike was glorious to ride. It looked better, smelled better, handled in a more worldly fashion, all as a result of being shelved for so long. I'm confident that it's SAT scores would have been higher if queried today than before the long storage..<br />
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Anyway, back to the LAAM. Took a long time. But if you want a custom seat at low (for custom, anyway) prices, have another seat and chill. So I got home from the dealer, and unboxed the seat. I specified leather-look vinyl. Carbon fiber look is fine, but it's not my favorite. The interesting part, and the part that makes this unboxing review useless to 99.97% of all readers is that, I dumped the ****** stock seat a long time ago. I went with the Yamaha Comfort Seat (which, incidentally, comes ine carbon fiber look vinyl). <br />
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I've done a SS1K on the comfort seat, and ridden it for over a year of regular riding. It is superb. A little hard, but superb. Okay, that's ********. It is hard like trigonometry is for normal people (not you, Hud, Ionbeam, or you other jackasses around here, I said normal people). The comfort seat is a little higher than the original. A little wider. Much more saddle shaped. Sooo, I got off the herky-jerk machine after an hour on the comfort seat, swapped to the new LAAM, and headed back out. Herky-jerks aside, it was an enjoyable, if brief, jaunt. At one point, I spontaneously proclaimed "great Odin's raven, this is a delightful custom seat!". This caused the nearby soccer mom, at the small park where I was doing figure eights and stops, to summon her children to her SUV. She then spirited them away, unbelted, perchance to sample the tasty offerings at the nearest McNugget emporium. I silently wished them safe travels from my plush cushioned perch.<br />
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The LAAM is interesting. Strikingly attractive, it is softer than the comfort seat (despite my jokes, if you can get through a month of riding on the comfort, it becomes a little more accommodating, losing some of the cinderblock allure present when brand new. Actually, broken in, it's great). It (the LAAM) is wider at the ass (my wording, deal with it) than the comfort seat. The LAAM is actually narrower at the front of the seat than the comfort seat (the part you are concerned about when you are, hopefully, flat-footing the bike). With a LAAM, the potential concern for those with 32" and shorter inseams (and something Seth questions you about), is will you be able to comfortably work the bike with your feet down. Any custom seat is a little bit higher than the original seat. So is the Yamaha comfort seat. I had already had many miles of being used to the comfort seat's wideness at the front, and it's thickness/increased height versus the original factory seat. So when I put the LAAM on, it wasn't any higher than what I was used to. Maybe even a hair lower. And it was easier for this 32" inseam habitual Danner Acadia wearer to flatfoot than it is with the comfort seat. It kind of felt like the LAAM was missing the front part of the seat, since I've become accustomed to having extraneous comfort seat pressing against my thighs the whole day long.<br />
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I think the comfort seat is such an improvement over the original seat, it's worth the money and then some. As I become accustomed to the plusher and far more richly appointed LAAM, I have no doubt it will represent a leap in comfort over the, well, comfort seat, as the comfort seat did over the original factory seat. I'd order the comfort seat again. I'd order the LAAM seat again. The improvement from OEM to LAAM would surely make one's head nearly explode. I'm surprised anyone has survived it.
<br />
Anyway, back to the LAAM. Took a long time. But if you want a custom seat at low (for custom, anyway) prices, have another seat and chill. So I got home from the dealer, and unboxed the seat. I specified leather-look vinyl. Carbon fiber look is fine, but it's not my favorite. The interesting part, and the part that makes this unboxing review useless to 99.97% of all readers is that, I dumped the ****** stock seat a long time ago. I went with the Yamaha Comfort Seat (which, incidentally, comes ine carbon fiber look vinyl). <br />
<br />
I've done a SS1K on the comfort seat, and ridden it for over a year of regular riding. It is superb. A little hard, but superb. Okay, that's ********. It is hard like trigonometry is for normal people (not you, Hud, Ionbeam, or you other jackasses around here, I said normal people). The comfort seat is a little higher than the original. A little wider. Much more saddle shaped. Sooo, I got off the herky-jerk machine after an hour on the comfort seat, swapped to the new LAAM, and headed back out. Herky-jerks aside, it was an enjoyable, if brief, jaunt. At one point, I spontaneously proclaimed "great Odin's raven, this is a delightful custom seat!". This caused the nearby soccer mom, at the small park where I was doing figure eights and stops, to summon her children to her SUV. She then spirited them away, unbelted, perchance to sample the tasty offerings at the nearest McNugget emporium. I silently wished them safe travels from my plush cushioned perch.<br />
<br />
The LAAM is interesting. Strikingly attractive, it is softer than the comfort seat (despite my jokes, if you can get through a month of riding on the comfort, it becomes a little more accommodating, losing some of the cinderblock allure present when brand new. Actually, broken in, it's great). It (the LAAM) is wider at the ass (my wording, deal with it) than the comfort seat. The LAAM is actually narrower at the front of the seat than the comfort seat (the part you are concerned about when you are, hopefully, flat-footing the bike). With a LAAM, the potential concern for those with 32" and shorter inseams (and something Seth questions you about), is will you be able to comfortably work the bike with your feet down. Any custom seat is a little bit higher than the original seat. So is the Yamaha comfort seat. I had already had many miles of being used to the comfort seat's wideness at the front, and it's thickness/increased height versus the original factory seat. So when I put the LAAM on, it wasn't any higher than what I was used to. Maybe even a hair lower. And it was easier for this 32" inseam habitual Danner Acadia wearer to flatfoot than it is with the comfort seat. It kind of felt like the LAAM was missing the front part of the seat, since I've become accustomed to having extraneous comfort seat pressing against my thighs the whole day long.<br />
<br />
I think the comfort seat is such an improvement over the original seat, it's worth the money and then some. As I become accustomed to the plusher and far more richly appointed LAAM, I have no doubt it will represent a leap in comfort over the, well, comfort seat, as the comfort seat did over the original factory seat. I'd order the comfort seat again. I'd order the LAAM seat again. The improvement from OEM to LAAM would surely make one's head nearly explode. I'm surprised anyone has survived it.
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