SRAM 1X Road
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1X doesn't provide enough gears for me when riding an MTB (yes I'm one of those old fashioned guys that rides up as well as down trails), and in it's current iteration certainly doesn't appeal for road use. But I guess it depends on the terrain you ride.
Could be very attractive to the TT community.
Could be very attractive to the TT community.
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- eliflap-scalpel
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with 42 , 44 or 46T at front and 11-36 at rear , i did a lot of km ...
and the number of teeth of the front ring grows up as fast as you get fit
and the number of teeth of the front ring grows up as fast as you get fit
http://eliflap.it/
I can see myself using something like this on a road bike, but certainly not my main ride. Simple and light with a 48T or 50T front and an 11-28 cassette in the back (no hills where I live).
Madone 9 - https://bit.ly/2Nqedbn
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Crockett - https://bit.ly/2Xem4sk
I'm a big fan and would certainly use it on my climbing bike. The clutch rear derailleur is a boat anchor though (+83 grams). I'd stick with a more weenie-friendly derailleur and risk chain slap. Also a replacement spider for my Lightning crank to put the chainline correct would be nice.
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http://www.bikeradar.com/gear/article/s ... ets-43808/
New version of the Force1/CX1 rear derailleur that works with the 10-42 cassettes...wow.
New version of the Force1/CX1 rear derailleur that works with the 10-42 cassettes...wow.
I have been running a standard xt rear mech (without clutch) and a raceface narrow/wide chainring on a mountain bike. Never a dropped chain in 1 year.
surely a clutch is not necessary on a roadie.however, I am running 11-32 on a 34t chain ring so my chain is nowhere as long as a 42t cassette needs.
surely a clutch is not necessary on a roadie.however, I am running 11-32 on a 34t chain ring so my chain is nowhere as long as a 42t cassette needs.
But since the new system uses "straight parallelogram" instead of "dual parallelogram" if you eliminate all the clutch stuff it seems it should be possible to built a lighter derailleur with this system. The derailleur faces a less challenging task. No need to take up arbitrary amounts of chain slack. Effective chain length in a given derailleur position is always the same. But it seems like there's a lot of extra beef here.
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I wonder if the red version will be a wireless RD that is lighter? With the very wide range in the cassette this might appeal to more people than I originally thought. This will at least remove the "strange" method used to shift chain rings with the wireless system.
2019 Baum Ristretto
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Pain is my friend!
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I looked at the numbers a bit closer, and assuming an 11sp rear 10-33 (not actually sure what will be avail but the video says 10-42 will be) and a 50 T ring on the front:
50x10@100rpm=63.1 km/hr
50x33@60rpm=11.5 km/hr
BUT there will be some pretty big jumps between gears.... For a 10-33 it might look like 10-12-14-16-18-20-22-24-27-30-33 mmmmmmmmm.......
50x10@100rpm=63.1 km/hr
50x33@60rpm=11.5 km/hr
BUT there will be some pretty big jumps between gears.... For a 10-33 it might look like 10-12-14-16-18-20-22-24-27-30-33 mmmmmmmmm.......
2019 Baum Ristretto
Pain is my friend!
Pain is my friend!
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djconnel wrote:But since the new system uses "straight parallelogram" instead of "dual parallelogram" if you eliminate all the clutch stuff it seems it should be possible to built a lighter derailleur with this system. The derailleur faces a less challenging task. No need to take up arbitrary amounts of chain slack. Effective chain length in a given derailleur position is always the same. But it seems like there's a lot of extra beef here.
Definitely a lot of extra beef. It's literally an XX1 RD with a different cage and a barrel adjuster instead of the Rollamajig. Notice how it even still has the hole for the cable housing to enter on the XX1 version.