I had a single xlab setup on my old bike, but when I went to the new one my seat was so far fwd it wouldn't fit. I found this tacx for $10 and it looked like it would work so figured what the hell. I love it! Can swap from one bottle to two depending on if racing or training.
Sporting the the tacx also. Launching depending much on the cage used, so that's up to you since no cage is provided. Made it work also on Adamo tt saddle (with the hook). Using gorilla cage,so no launching. -shoki
My rear hydration set up is very simple. A single specialized rib cage mounted with a single bolt screwed into a hole in my Koobi saddle. The saddle has an existing mount hole for their proprietary hydration module... that I never bought. The lower end of the cage has a notch that cradles the seat post and therefore doesn't pivot on the bolt from side to side. Very stable and I've never launched a bottle. It wouldn't work with two bottles, but I prefer the single anyway.
Sporting the the tacx also. Launching depending much on the cage used, so that's up to you since no cage is provided. Made it work also on Adamo tt saddle (with the hook). Using gorilla cage,so no launching.
Can you share photos of that? Have a profile designs FC25 BTA as my main, but would like a non-downtube option for on the course replacement bottles.
Before I forget.....after I found the right angle I used extra strong glue and a self lock screw nut on the joint. Also use the mountpart from an old profile which seemed a little stronger. But I'm a little overthinking things sometimes. -shoki
Thanks - is the hook still usable or is that a no go (it doesn't look like it is, but maybe I'm wrong)? I'm wondering if there's a more permanent/destructive (e.g., drilling a hole in the hook part of the seat) that would allow for both mounting a cage back there and still being able to use the hook.
You can still rack it there but it won't hang on the hook but on the carrier itself. Don't know if the material of the hook is that strong to mount a cage there, doubt it. -shoki