Upgrading from downtube shifters to brifters - Shimano 6500 / 6600
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Thanks again, all.
Can anyone point me in the direction of a 6500 compatibility chart so I can track through the FD, RD, cassette to shifters?
Can anyone point me in the direction of a 6500 compatibility chart so I can track through the FD, RD, cassette to shifters?
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#28
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I believe you're thinking of an 11-speed hub with a 9- or 10-speed cassette. The hub on this bike won't need a spacer, the current 9 he's getting and the 10 he might replace it with fit in the same space without one.
#29
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Background: with Dura Ace 10-speed, Shimano originally went to an alloy freehub to save weight. To attempt to preserve durability, they used taller splines. Spacing indicated the freehub could be 1mm narrower (cogs and spacers are narrower at 10-speed), so those early 10-speed alloy freehubs were 1mm shorter than 8- and 9-speed freehubs. I believe this shorter freehub with taller spline design was also used on 10-speed Ultegra and (maybe) some 10-speed 105, though possibly not in alloy.
This didn't exactly go over well. So after about 3 years, Shimano ditched the alloy freehub idea and went back to steel or titanium for their freehubs. But the 10-speed cassette width remained - it had to, in order to support existing Shimano 10-speed hubs - thus needing a 1mm spacer if used on an 8- or 9-speed hub.
SRAM 10-speed cassettes, in contrast, are reputedly 1mm wider and thus don't need one. I say "reputedly" as I've never used a SRAM cassette myself. Can't remember if a Microshift 10-speed cassette needs one or not, and haven't ever purchased a 10-speed Sunrace/Miche/other cassette.
Source: https://cyclingtips.com/2022/08/a-gu...compatibility/
Last edited by Hondo6; 02-08-23 at 03:27 PM.
#30
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Well that's certainly weird! I've interchanged a lot of 8-, 9- and 10-speed cassettes (Shimano, SRAM and SunRace) on what are nominally called 8/9/10 hubs and never encountered this situation you've presented but I believe you. Weird!
#31
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Case in point: Mavic freehubs were long enough to accommodate 11-speed cassettes for some years before Shimano even released 11-speed. For whatever reason, at some point Mavic started making their freehubs 1.75mm longer than the standard 8/9-speed Shimano freehub. I want to say that happened during the late 2000s or very early 2010s, but I'm working from memory and might be wrong. They supplied a 1.75mm spacer to go with their hubs so that 8-, 9-, and 10-speed cassettes could be used with them.
When Shimano released 11-speed road, the Shimano 11-speed freehub was 1.85mm longer than their 8/9-speed freehub design. The 0.1mm difference between that and Mavic's freehub turned out to be insignificant, and many Mavic freehubs (and wheels) were thus 11-speed ready the day Shimano released 11-speed.
Lucky guess? Insider info? Who knows? But regardless, it worked out for Mavic.
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At one time Mavic made their own cassettes using the Shimano spline pattern. These cassettes could be spaced for either Shimano or Campagnolo using spacers of different thicknesses. Since the Campagnolo spacers were thicker, the free hub had to be made longer
#33
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That would make sense in explaining the why. And it also means that Mavic got incredibly lucky, too.

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Like another poster said, just find a nice used bike already set up with brake lever shifters.
Who knows, you might find 11sp for the same price to buy & modify this proposed 9sp one.
Making the swap for the mechanically-inclined presents no obstacle. But taking to a shop add$ to the overall tab.
Because the swap means more than cabling. You got brake and derailleur adjustments, bar tape to deal with, chain fiddling, etc.
Best of luck.
Who knows, you might find 11sp for the same price to buy & modify this proposed 9sp one.
Making the swap for the mechanically-inclined presents no obstacle. But taking to a shop add$ to the overall tab.
Because the swap means more than cabling. You got brake and derailleur adjustments, bar tape to deal with, chain fiddling, etc.
Best of luck.