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Cassette advice needed.
Actually posted over at road forum but was hoping input from mechs here...to make sure there aren't any issues I may have overlooked.
I need more lower gears for climbing (I'm a clyde yes)...running a short cage campy derailleur. Official campy stance: medium cage needed for 13-29 (rather not do that) but some say they run it just fine... I don't like the idea of losing that much tall gearing so leaning towards the IRD 12-28 (120 bucks) or the Miche 12-27 (60 bucks) Anyone have experience with these cassettes? Any recomendations very welcome. Thanks always! http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d2...d/GearInch.jpg |
Your current rd will run the Campy 13-29 just fine. You'll have chain length issues to deal with probably. It seems cost is a factor in your descision. Miche makes individual cogs so you can mix and match. Pull the 13t or 14t from your current cassette and add a 27t to the backside with the appropriate spacer. About $7 plus shipping. It's worth a try to see if it is low enough for you before dropping the dough on a cassette.
2 cents out. |
What you are running now and what you want to change to is not appreciably different. You will be getting about 5 gear inches lower, which is likely to be unnoticeable.
Theres more of a jump in gear inches from a 52/13 to a 52/14 than what you will achieve by changing to another cassette. |
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I lost you with this 52/13, 52/14... |
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If you can feel 2 gear inches, you are a better man than I. |
I think 6 gear inches is a huge difference when it's the lowest gear on the bike and you're climbing a steep hill. And a difference of 2 gear inches does also makes a significant difference when climbing.
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6 gear-inches is a large percentage change in the low gear range and should be a very noticable improvement. Going from a 25 to a 27T cog is an 8% reduction and 25 to 29T is a 16% improvement. 8% is noticable and 16% is really noticable.
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Sort of like price changes. If a new car increases from $20,000 to $20,005 it's not the same impact as if a can of coffee increases from $10 to $15. Same $5 change but not perceived the same. |
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If my bike has a 6 gear inch difference compared to your bike, then our bikes will be 6 inches apart every revolution fo the crank. Consider track cyclists spinning at 150-180 rpms, races are won and lost by a gear inch or less...from what I understand. |
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Ok, that makes sense, so from your post above, going from a 36/25-27 (8%) is about the same % change as going from a 52/13 -14, (7.7%) which is definitely noticeable, and from 36/25-29 is double that, or close to the difference between a 52/13 -15 (16%), which is a big difference in percieved gearing. So is it safe to say that the rule of thumb in lower gears is that a 2 tooth difference is about the same as a one tooth difference in higher gears, in terms of how a cyclist perceives the change? |
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there ... I said it ... |
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For instance, like I mentioned in the OP I changed my crank arm length from 172.5 to 175. So I'm laying down more torque hence it should feel easier climbing. This isn't reflected in GI charts, but if you use gain ratios, you get a picture of the effort. (old schoolers still prefer gi though) http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d2...tios_Chart.jpg |
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110 X 3.1416 = 345.5 inches 116 X 3.1416 = 364.4 inches 364.4 - 345.5 = 18.9 inches |
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To me, a simple rider with only high school physics (but college math!), small changes in the low (climbing) gears are more noticeable than similar changes in the high gears, whether they be in some absolute number such as gear inches or relative number like percentage change. Not only more noticeable, but more important.... for me anyway. Why? Because I'm not only just a simple rider, I'm old and weak. To me, I really notice and appreciate any small difference that makes difficult hills more ridable within the "zone" of effort I try to maintain on normal, "base-building" rides. I don't notice the same small change on the other end, because I don't really care, or notice what it takes to go 40 MPH downhill or whether my top speed is 44 or 41 mph. The change from my 11-23 cassette to 12-26 was a very little change on either end, but it is noticeable and important on the low (30 front-26 rear) end and virtually invisible at the high (52-12) end. |
And you're going through all this why? Because you don't want to run a medium cage dérailleur. Would you care to tell us why not?
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According to Campagnolo, you do need one.
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I guess you could try it very carefully on the workstand and then decide about a medium cage. Personally I would buy the medium cage or go with a 50/36 Campy compact. I've got Record carbon 53/39, 13-26 and in the future may need to make the same expensive decision. That 26 isn't low enough for some of these 15% hills around here. |
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I still don't see how you can claim, everything else on the bike being equal that, +6 gear inches at 30 gear inches total on the drivetrain is different than +6 gear inches at 60. |
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Or, you could go whole hog and get a standard triple crank with the 13/29 cassette - but you'd also need a long cage RD. |
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