I have one on my attitude. On the bike, never had an issue. Off bike, it is really easy to accidently twist the saddle and loose your setting. So you use the set screw to lock the post, which defeats the no tool aspect.
Ouch. Guilty as charged for the 'spamming' thing. I wouldn't call them 'flawed' at all though. Come on down to our shop and meet the inventor. Brilliant guy. Can look at your bike and imagine a thousand ways to make it better. Not quite as brilliant when it comes to marketing and sales. Hence the overstock.
I think the seatclamp was threaded into the post. The whole assembly was loosened by turning the seat conter-clockewise, and tightened by turning the seat clockwise. I don't know if they were any good. The only ones I saw were in magazines.
You know, if he's selling outdated seatposts of questionable functionality for 50-60 bucks, he could probably afford to pay for an MTBR classified ad, instead of just having a friend spam every ancient onza related thread on here.
In my experience if there is a huge backstock of a 1990s bike part somewhere it indicates a flawed failure.
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