A 30-second Geek chair review: Aeron, Mirra, or Leap?

October 30th, 2008
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A chair is an underrated essential item for a programmer; consider how much time is spent in it. Things came to a head when I moved recently. Whilst lugging around all those boxes and furniture my back insisted on telling me it is in poor health. Most probably I arrived at this situation by sitting a large, very impressive, leather executive chair which my cousin lent me whilst he is overseas. It really looks and feels great to other people who saw me in it; but was terrible for me to actually sit in over time - being quite a short fella perhaps didn’t help. I was adopting such a curved slouch that I was even putting a cushion in behind me to fill some of the gap.

Anyway I decided it was time to get a proper “task” chair to alleviate the situation.

Now everybody (in the internet world) is well aware of the famous Herman-Miller “Aeron”. Needs no introduction really. The price tag does need some recovery time… say AU$1300 as a guide. But in researching reviews from the USA I saw quite a few favourable mentions of the Steelcase “Leap”. They’re an unknown in Australia.

Steelcase Leap

The Steelcase Leap task chair
It seems Steelcase aren’t using the usual retail channel to flog individual chairs. None of the retail stores stock them. I’m not spending a thousand dollars on a chair without sitting in it, but rather fortunately they have a showroom/office in Sydney so I went to check them out. “How many would you like?”, “Well just one.”, “oh”. The sales rep took me to her own desk and invited me to sit in her own chair - which was a little unexpected.

It felt really good. She ran through the controls and I was rather impressed with the variety and particularly the ease adjustments could be made. I wasn’t sitting particularly long, maybe 20 minutes, but my back was saying ‘yes’ and was already envisaging my spine lining up again and long abused muscles getting their wake up call. They don’t stock these things and suggested an order and 12 week wait. I can’t wait that long!

The Aeron and Mirra

The Herman-Miller Aeron task chair
I found an Herman-Miller retailer around the corner, so ran to check out the Aeron and Mirra. Yeah, nice chair, but didn’t immediately impress me as being all that worthy of the price tag. Generally the age of the design was quite evident. To raise/lower the arms I had to get off the chair, walk around the back and wrestle them in to place. To adjust the tension of spring in the backrest required a lot of turning the knob with very little feedback - am I turning it the right way? Is anything happening? To stop the backrest I don’t recall being difficult, but to release the backrest once on the backstop required taking all your weight off the back of the chair - enough to release the pin - before being able to lean back further. This last inconvenience paled the Aeron in comparison to the Leap.

The Mirra came across as a crippled version of the Aeron.

Leap wins

There was no real comparison in my mind. They both might be comfortable chairs but the Leap was equal or more comfortable, vastly easier to use, and 30% cheaper.

The armrests float a surprising distance: 2 inches forward/back and an inch in/out without having to touch any knobs - something the Aeron was entirely void of. The up/down action (2-3 inches) is a simple push button on the armrest. You might rationalize that once you’ve set these things up the ease which they move is no longer relevant. But you’d be wrong. I’m finding myself moving the armrests around all day as various positions become tired and I resettle into a new one. The ease of movement is fantastic.

The backrest is excellent. For one, the tension can be adjusted in quarter turn measures, as opposed to 10 turn measures for the Aeron. But truthfully I don’t change the tension routinely; once I’ve set the tension such that once I settle on an angle it will stay there without having to apply force to keep it there I leave it alone. The major difference here is that if I push further it will go and stay there as I stop pushing. Hard to convey in words but basically it is easy to get both the right amount of back support and a comfortable back angle without touching any knobs. My concern with the Aeron was the requirement to lean forward and release every time I wanted to change the angle of the backrest. The Leap also has four backstop positions which I’m surprised to be using increasingly; when I’m “thinking”, reading, browsing, talking then I let it lean right back. But when concentrating I get upright and set it to the first or second position - right hand click-click-done.

Acquisition

Getting my Leap chair was not all that conventional. As I mentioned Steelcase appear to be neglecting retail sales, no doubt chasing the big deals. I chatted to the sales rep (gosh that was easy, an unsurpassed beauty) at their showroom/office and expressed the urgency of my need and my disinterest in specific options (eg color and quality of the fabric etc). Surely there was one just lying around ready for sale. She said she’d see if she could find a spare one. A few days later I was directed to go to an area near the airport (Mascot) and collect my chair.

It was quite difficult to find the dirt road as it lay through the gates of an unrelated warehouse. I arrived in a brown dusty dirt paddock town made up of shipping containers. The office was, of course, a shipping container. Out in the dust, standing in front of a big red two story shipping container was a large cardboard box in which I found my chair (fully assembled inside the box). I chatted to the lady in the ‘office’ and discovered that the gorgeous sales rep had indeed had to dig around to find me a chair. Seems this particular chair was originally shipped in for a very large Westpac order. I guess they didn’t want it yet/anymore. Lucky me.

Four weeks later and I’m still very pleased with both the decision to spend some real money on a chair, and to get the Leap.

  1. Alex
    November 20th, 2009 at 20:55 | #1

    Hi John - great piece on the Leap chair. I’m looking for one too, but in Indonesia, which might prove even more of a challenge. I’ve spoken to Steecase and I’ve also been quoted 10 - 12 weeks. And import duty and freight costs are prohibitive. I can get a good deal if I buy 10 though….

    Hmmm.

    Thanks for the piece though. Reinforces my commitment to get hold of one of these chairs…

    Alex

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