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I have the iBert front-mounting child seat. I've used it previously attached to my street bike as in the below image, but between the straight bars and the shifter triggers, I had to mount it so low that my knees knocked against it while riding, which is a non-starter.

I recently acquired a long-tail cargo bike with cruiser-style handlebars, which I intended to use with the iBert seat. Unfortunately, the stem is fixed-height and does not have the 3/4" straight length between the frame and handlebars required for the T-bar mounting post (see the maker's website).

manufacturer instructions

However, the seat post is adjustable, so I thought I might be able to simply mount this seat in the rear instead. Most child seats are rear-mounted, the seat post seems as durable as the stem, and in this configuration the seat won't be moving side-to-side as it does when attached to the stem.

I can't find anywhere on the maker's website that this is explicitly prohibited or warned against. I have emailed them, but the response I received was that they have been purchased by another company and "appreciate your patience" while they go through that process - no response with respect to the mounting locations. I also don't see anything online that addresses whether it's a reasonable "hack" to mount the seat this way. The mounting bar is a simple assembly with two bolts that I'm sure I'll be able to physically attach to the seat post, high enough to clear the rear rack. What I'm not sure of is:

  • Is this likely to damage the bicycle?
  • Is there reason to think this would be unsafe for my passenger?

I am also not sure if the legs of the seat will interfere with the rider in front; assuming it's safe enough for the passenger and the bike, I can test that out on my own.

The bike is equipped with a sturdy double-leg kickstand, such that both tires are in contact with level ground when the kickstand is deployed and the bike is stable for loading/unloading.

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    Ask the manufacturer, and if you're willing to bodge safety on a child seat.
    – Batman
    Aug 21, 2015 at 3:12
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    @Batman I have emailed them, but they have yet to comment. I've been able to find literally nothing on this question online, which is the only reason I'm asking here.
    – Air
    Aug 21, 2015 at 4:02
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    I think it's a reasonable question, and looking at it I'd be tempted to try it. Mostly I'm concerned that your legs might hit the kids feet. If you can return the seat and get a rear-mounted one that would, of course, be better.
    – Móż
    Aug 21, 2015 at 4:23
  • @Mσᶎ Yes, I'm looking at a rear-mounted Yepp, but it's a bit spendy. Will have to wait until I can find a buyer for the ibert and a trailer that I tried before it.
    – Air
    Aug 21, 2015 at 5:04
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    Looking at the images on the net, I can't see how you could mount it to a seat post and still have room to have a seat attached. Even if it does, I suspect the child face will be too close to the rear of the seat for safety.
    – mattnz
    Aug 21, 2015 at 7:00

1 Answer 1

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Wth the childs's legs sticking forward the way the website suggests, you've got no hope. You could easily check this by fitting the seat and trying to ride without the child -- that way you don't even need to do the clamps up tight. You're also likely to find that the slumped-foward head rest sticks into your lower back and means that you're badly positioned on the saddle -- just what you don't want when you're controlling a bike with an extra load up high.

It's got more support than most front-mount seats but in general they're designed for you to have your arms round the child and your back behind them. This one still has a very low back, and if the child falls asleep behind you they'll be flopping around like crazy and you won't know about it (though this happens even on much bigger rear seats as well, at least then their head can't flop backwards going over a bump.)

Most people I see riding with front mount seats have to ride with their knees very wide to avoid the seat -- and this is a wider seat than I've seen on the road. It seems to me that there's only quite a limited set of bike/rider/conditions combinations for which front seats work: You need to be at the small end of your frame's adjustments, with wide bars, and riding on flat roads where you don't need to work hard to accelerate.

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  • I'll try to verify this tonight. From experience, if a toddler falls asleep in this seat it's very bad news - even front mounted. The one thing in this answer that throws me for a loop is the reference to a head rest? If you mean the toy steering wheel shown on the website attached to the lap bar, that's a newer model. Adding an image of the correct model to the question now.
    – Air
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:23
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    @Air is that what it is? I'm more used to seeing the weeride which has a nice something to lean on.
    – Chris H
    Aug 21, 2015 at 15:56

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