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Old 06-15-10 | 09:00 AM
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cyccommute
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Originally Posted by BengeBoy
As far as I know, it's primarily about getting the gearing down low enough for where many tourists prefer their gearing to be.

With a "road triple" you have chain rings of 50-39-30 and with a current 10-speed rear cassette you'll have something like a 12-27 in the rear.

With a "mountain bike" drive train you can get a triple with (for example) 46-34-24, or 44-32-22 and a 9-speed rear cassette of 11-32, 11-34, or even recently 12-36.

The road triple w/a road cassette in the rear gets you a low of 30 gear inches; the MTB drive drain gets you down to less than 20 gear inches. Big difference.

Take a look at the way that Bruce Gordon spec's his loaded touring bikes:
http://www.bgcycles.com/faq.html

Or Co-Motion Americano:
http://www.co-motion.com/single_bikes/americano.html

Nothing says you have to do a MTB drive-train -- plenty of people seem to survive with the higher gears. My own light touring bike is a mix-and-match -- a road triple in front (50-39-30) with a 9-speed MTB cassette in the rear (12-34). You can also do what Cannondale does on one of their bikes -- mix a "road" triple with an IRD wide-range 10-speed derailleur. But if you want low, low gears and are building a bike from scratch a MTB drive train will get you there faster.

The other common MTB component brought over to touring bikes is rear hubs with 135mm spacing. Supposedly helps create stronger wheels than a standard road hub.
All true. I will add, however, that some road triples can be fitted with a 24 tooth inner ring, if the inner bolt circle diameter (BCD) is 74mm. Shimano, in a effort to screw up every thing, has introduced a 94mm BCD crank. The smallest inner ring for that crank is 30 teeth. Shimano has done this because, as everyone knows, only strong, young, fit racer dudes ride bikes in places where it's flat

Mountain bike cranks used to be able to take as low as an 18 tooth inner...until Shimano decided that strong, young, fit racer dudes ride bikes in places where it's flat

Now the trend is towards 2x9 systems because only strong, young, fit racer dudes ride bikes in places where it's flat

All ranting...well, most ranting...aside, mountain bike stuff makes sense because it allows for lower gears both front and rear.
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