TarrSteps
Well-Known Member
The fact that it is easier to stop a horse in a Pelham tells you that the action is sharper - therefore some could say stronger - the action is different!
A snaffle is the milder of all the bits because as many of us have actually noticed this is a bit that is pretty useless if the horse gets strong or takes off.
They work differently.
Also, simply put, the action of a snaffle is directly acted on your hand as the same amount as the horse's mouth. So the amount you are pulling is the amount the horse feels. Leverage bits, by definition, work by increasing the force of the hand by a factor determined by the lever, which is usually in the 2/2.5 ish range for most Pelhams. So if you have 4lbs in your hand, the horse feels 8+lbs. Pelhams are lighter for people, not for horses.
Re bearing surface, yes the bearing surface of the bit definitely determines "strength". Smaller surface + same force = higher psi. Of course thicker bits can be uncomfortable for some horses because of their mouth conformation so thinner bits are "kinder" to them but basically the thinner/sharper the bit, the more pressure it exerts. This is why twists etc are more severe and why the point about waterfords above is valid. No one thinks a bicycle chain bit (yes, really) is kind just because it is flexible. Double wire bits with offset joints are actually milder, relatively speaking, than single wire bits because the bearing surface is larger and the joint does not fully collapse. Looks scarier but isn't.
These two aspects work together, too. We experience rein pressure on a relatively wide strip of leather in a relatively strong and weathered part of our body. Horses experience it in a very sensitive area, pretty much right on the bone. . . .
Of course, the problem is bitting is not an exact science and horses don't read books!
Last edited: