After visiting LH Thomson’s factory and talking with Dave Parrett in depth about their upcoming adjustable height dropper seatpost’s internals, it seemed clear they were on to something.
We covered the internals tech pretty well in that post, but the short of it is this: Rather than rely on mechanical clamps or an air chamber, Thomson’s post uses an oil cartridge to control height and nitrogen shock to return it to full height. The remote lever pulls a cable, which rotates a graduated cam that presses a release valve for the oil cartridge. As it’s depressed, oil is allowed to flow between the upper and lower chambers. Release the lever and it closes the valve. Since oil won’t compress, the post sticks in whatever position it’s in when you let go of the lever. If your weight’s on it, it’ll drop. If not, the nitrogen shock pushes it back up.
Drop in for our first impressions on how that all comes together, plus actual weights and more…
It’s important to note that this is a late stage prototype, not quite production. Most it is what you’ll see when they hit your local bike shop save that it’ll likely have different cable and housing. That said, it’s pretty darn close, and this particular one is Parrett’s personal post that he’s been trashing testing for a while. What’s impressive about that is there there’s zero play in it and the action is as smooth as can be.
The 400mm 30.9 post with cable, housing and remote lever comes in at 586g.
The drop and rise rate is preset, but you can control it by limiting how much you depress the lever.
The saddle clamp is classic Thomson.
The cable pulls a lever that actuates the cam underneath the saddle clamp’s lower cradle. If you routinely ride in muddy or wet weather, it’s probably not a bad idea to remove your saddle completely every couple months and clean out the top of the post (video in the Factory Tour post shows this close up). These pics show starting position (left) and with the lever fully pressed (right). There’s not a lot of movement, and that’s one of the reasons why it’s a little difficult to control the rate of descent or ascent by feathering the lever.