Desk Chair

I do see a consultant as I have an old injury causing my pelvis to be prone to moving out of line needing adjustment. One of the route causes is a crap seating posture...

Surely the user is as much to blame as the chair he is sitting on?

Pianist sits on a stool, with no back, they don't have a problem, in fact, one can argue that having a back to the stool makes one lazy and slope into it.
 
Surely the user is as much to blame as the chair he is sitting on?

Pianist sits on a stool, with no back, they don't have a problem, in fact, one can argue that having a back to the stool makes one lazy and slope into it.

How you sit has an influence, but it's not simply a case of sitting up straight as any consultant will tell you. If it were we would all be sitting on a couple of bits of 3 by 2...
 


I don't know many people who sit correctly in front of their PC's. Personally I seem to spend most of my time in position 1 above. I don't have any back problems though, even after about 20 years. I put this down to taking regular breaks, where I either recline, as in position 3 above, or I simply get up and walk away to do something.
 
I've shoved a footstool under by desk so I'm like position 3 - but with my feet up too :)

All on my £5 chair off ebay, most comfortably little chair imaginable and it's got no daft wheels on it!
 
If you spend a lot of time in a chair, surely it makes sense to get a decent one that will be healthy for your back, even if it does cost a little bit more?
 
Which chair for £50-£60 then guys?
This one is ok, very much like the markus:
http://www.ryman.co.uk/1075086003/High-Back-Mesh-Chair/Product

I had one for a while, though the fabric started to wear quite badly on the seat after about 2 years. I don't think there is any chair you're going to get for that amount that will last more than 1 - 2 years.

And there are no "quality" ones for that price. You should probably just go for the one you think looks the best fit.
 
I have a Markus and have found it quite poor. The padding is thin, it's not that comfy after a couple of months and it's a bit wobbly.
 
This one is ok, very much like the markus:
http://www.ryman.co.uk/1075086003/High-Back-Mesh-Chair/Product

I had one for a while, though the fabric started to wear quite badly on the seat after about 2 years. I don't think there is any chair you're going to get for that amount that will last more than 1 - 2 years.

And there are no "quality" ones for that price. You should probably just go for the one you think looks the best fit.

Cheers, ticks all the boxes but the back looks a bit iffy with the sticky out thing. Was it comfortable when you had it?
 
That looks like a Herman Miller knock off, interesting, currently sitting in an Ikea Markus but it is half the money of that one there.

We have loads of those £1k herman's at work, they're ok but they're not worth 1k. I'd pay £250 tops.

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The Aeron is a very old chair now, and far from the best ergonomically - the steel bar at the front of the seat being the main issue in terms of squashing the back of people's legs. The Mirra is an excellent lower-cost version of it which has an adjustable seat depth (sort of). The Embody is their new top of the range option.
 
We have an office full of Steelcase Think and Leaps. Both excellent chairs.

If you don't want to go for a brand name like Herman Miller or Steelcase then look for an 'operators' chair.
 
This one is ok, very much like the markus:
http://www.ryman.co.uk/1075086003/High-Back-Mesh-Chair/Product

I had one for a while, though the fabric started to wear quite badly on the seat after about 2 years. I don't think there is any chair you're going to get for that amount that will last more than 1 - 2 years.

And there are no "quality" ones for that price. You should probably just go for the one you think looks the best fit.

Something that stood out for me regarding the Markus is that the back is a lot higher than the "high back" chairs I looked at for <£100. The phrase "high back" doesn't really mean anything because "high" is a relative term. A seat with a 6 inch back has a high back compared with a stool. I looked at, or looked at detailed measurements of, about a dozen chairs under £100 described as having a high back and none of them would have given me any head support at all. The backs came up to about 2/3rds the way up my back. I'm 5'11", so I'm not unusually tall. The back on the Markus comes up to an inch or two above the back of my head.

So, my advice to the OP is to pay close attention to the real height of the back of the chair, measured in inches or cm, and hardly any attention to meaningless advertising terms such as "high back".
 
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