1x11 for road/circuit racing
Moderator: robbosmans
Anyone running a 1x set up yet? One of my friends just built an Aithein with Force 1 and I'm sorely tempted to do the same on mine
for spring (although it hurts to leave Campy...) I really can't see a reason for not doing it, especially for crit racing.
If no one has said it yet, I'm saying now. Give it two years and it'll be as common as 2x for amateur racing.
for spring (although it hurts to leave Campy...) I really can't see a reason for not doing it, especially for crit racing.
If no one has said it yet, I'm saying now. Give it two years and it'll be as common as 2x for amateur racing.
If you don't have long climbs there won't be a problem going 1x.
If you know the speeds you need to reach (check Strava recordings of the crits you race) and your max cadence, just play around here: http://ritzelrechner.de/
I'm thinking about building up an allroad bike with 1x and I'll be going with a single 36 or 38 ring up front which will let me reach 45 kph, enough for medium speed group rides. Anything from 46 to 50 should work for most races, and with a wide-range cassette you can still climb.
If you know the speeds you need to reach (check Strava recordings of the crits you race) and your max cadence, just play around here: http://ritzelrechner.de/
I'm thinking about building up an allroad bike with 1x and I'll be going with a single 36 or 38 ring up front which will let me reach 45 kph, enough for medium speed group rides. Anything from 46 to 50 should work for most races, and with a wide-range cassette you can still climb.
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Oh, you can easily achieve the same range as a standard compact setup, no question about that.
For allroad/gravel/cx there's absolutely no question about going to 1x. I'd go for something a bit bigger than 38 up front though? I'm not a fan of turning a small ring though. Personal preference as always.
For allroad/gravel/cx there's absolutely no question about going to 1x. I'd go for something a bit bigger than 38 up front though? I'm not a fan of turning a small ring though. Personal preference as always.
If you are going to run a 53 in the front, then no problem. If not, everyone else will have bigger gears than you, which will cripple you in a sprint finish.
You mention, that you dont se any reason not to do it. I dont se any reason to do it. Are you going to change your setup for hilly training or races afterwords? Or do you have a different bike for those occassions?
IMHO the new 1 chainring setup is purely marketing. They want to sell you some new stuff. There is absolutely no reason to do it. And the saved weight is margins....
You mention, that you dont se any reason not to do it. I dont se any reason to do it. Are you going to change your setup for hilly training or races afterwords? Or do you have a different bike for those occassions?
IMHO the new 1 chainring setup is purely marketing. They want to sell you some new stuff. There is absolutely no reason to do it. And the saved weight is margins....
Honestly it was on my radar before they made it a 'thing'.
52/40 gives you a lower ratio than 39/25, so actually better for climbing. And you're only missing out on one tooth for sprinting, for which I'd drop to an 11t from a 12t on the rear block to compensate.
52/40 gives you a lower ratio than 39/25, so actually better for climbing. And you're only missing out on one tooth for sprinting, for which I'd drop to an 11t from a 12t on the rear block to compensate.
Multebear wrote:53 in the front... will have bigger gears than you... cripple you in a sprint finish.
If you regularly have 75kph sprint finishes, this is true!
However, if you don't have your own lead-out train, your sprint will be fine with quite a bit less then a 53 up front
Just look at the data you have available and do the math.
Any idea if running a force 1 or rival 1 would be lighter than ultegra 6800? Still trying to decide which groupset to put for my second bike. Riding terrain is pretty flat and thus I reckon 1x would be sufficient,and lighter.
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Yup one of my customers built #critVagen
He's won a few races on it too. Such a bad ass bike
He's won a few races on it too. Such a bad ass bike
junchen wrote:Any idea if running a force 1 or rival 1 would be lighter than ultegra 6800? Still trying to decide which groupset to put for my second bike. Riding terrain is pretty flat and thus I reckon 1x would be sufficient,and lighter.
My friend who runs a mix of rival 1 and XTR reckons it's on par with double Red.
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=136257
A clutch derailleur (if you use one) is tons heavier than a standard Red or Force one.
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XTR mech is 185g I think before tuning which is not that much more and you do loose the inner chainring, front mech and cable so a net weight saving.
I would do it to if a narrow wide chainring where done in road sizes. Oh wait it out in 50T 110 BCD http://www.wolftoothcomponents.com/prod ... chainrings
Well I think I be going 1x11 as when I am racing I dont use the inner ring anyway.
I would do it to if a narrow wide chainring where done in road sizes. Oh wait it out in 50T 110 BCD http://www.wolftoothcomponents.com/prod ... chainrings
Well I think I be going 1x11 as when I am racing I dont use the inner ring anyway.
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