Could We Be Heading Into a "Roadie Dark Ages"?
#51
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Perhaps the math is over your head. 10/9=1.11 11/10=1.10 12/11=1.09. That means changes of 11, 10 and 9%. 16/15 = 1.067 or 6.7%. The percentage difference gets smaller as the sprockets get larger, but at some point a 1 tooth change is too small. If you're pedaling at 100 rpm, a 9,10 or 11 rpm drop down to 90 isn't excessive. I have no problem with my 10-11-12-13 sequence on my 10-36 sram cassette, but the 13-15 jump can be annoying. Campy would use a 10-11-12-13-14-16-18-20-23-27-31-36.
Last edited by DaveSSS; 10-01-20 at 08:09 AM.
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New alleged UCI rules will relax some requirements on things that should open up road bike frame design a bit more: https://cyclingtips.com/2020/10/new-...et-a-shake-up/
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#54
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Perhaps the math is over your head. 10/9=1.11 11/10=1.10 12/11=1.09. That means changes of 11, 10 and 9%. 16/15 = 1.067 or 6.7%. The percentage difference gets smaller as the sprockets get larger, but at some point a 1 tooth change is too small. If you're pedaling at 100 rpm, a 9,10 or 11 rpm drop down to 90 isn't excessive. I have no problem with my 10-11-12-13 sequence on my 10-36 sram cassette, but the 13-15 jump can be annoying. Campy would use a 10-11-12-13-14-15-16-18-20-27-31-36.
Just curious, Is that 20-27 gap a typo (35%) -- it seems out of place?
#55
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I don't see a Campy 10-36, though I didn't look all that hard.
https://www.campagnolo.com/US/en/Com...peed_sprockets
#56
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You called the high end shifts a "very little percentage difference", when in fact from a relative standpoint the 6% shifts in the middle of the cassettes would be more deserving of that designation, and are areas of the cassette where many many riders like 1-tooth shifts.
Just curious, Is that 20-27 gap a typo (35%) -- it seems out of place?
Just curious, Is that 20-27 gap a typo (35%) -- it seems out of place?
Mathematically, the 1T jumps are as small as possible. Call them too big if you want, but any accomplished cyclist should easily be able to handle a 10% change. It's a lot better than the ridiculous 10-12-14-16 that you see on some cassettes.
I spent over a year riding the Campy 11-34 12 speed cassette, that has much more sensible spacing than a shimano 11-34, 11 speed. I now use a sram 10-36 12 speed. It lacks the 14, which is noticeable in the 25-29 mph range. A campy 10-36 would fix that. Campy does not offer any 12 speed cassettes starting with a 10 yet, but they now have the freehub body and Ekar 1x13 system to make a 10-36 12 speed cassette if they choose. The current chorus 12 RD will work with a 10-36 sram cassette.
https://forums.thepaceline.net/showthread.php?t=258775
Last edited by DaveSSS; 10-01-20 at 08:32 AM.
#57
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If "Dark Ages" is a period without dramatic innovation, I'd say road bikes had been there, more or less, for many decades and we've just started to really depart from the norms over maybe the last five years or so.
From around the 1970s well into the 2010s, you could pretty much count on a road bike to:
The "big" changes during this era involved:
I'd argue the more recent changes are far more significant. They've changed the road bike from a device that was wholly mechanical to a more complex system that involves electronics and hydraulics and makes the mechanical features less accessible and more likely to be proprietary.
Rather than thinking that these changes will lead to another great, long 40-year period of relative stability, I'd think that we'll see more change as new opportunities to use electronics are tested.
At the same time, I think that "traditional" road bikes will continue to be built and used -- wholly mechanical, rim brakes, etc. -- so maybe the result is just greater product diversity, less clarity on what a road bike is, and above all, hopefully more people finding one they like. If more people are out on bikes, in my mind it's not the dark ages.
From around the 1970s well into the 2010s, you could pretty much count on a road bike to:
- Brake with the rims
- Ride on 700c wheels
- Have a 2 x Something drivetrain
- Use quick release skewers
- Use a chain
- Have a rigid three-main-tube frame and fork
- Work as a wholly mechanical device that relies on cables, springs, bearings, etc.
The "big" changes during this era involved:
- widening the head tube a little to accept a wider steer tube
- changing where the bearings go to support the bottom bracket spindle
- moving the axle spacing out in the rear by 4 mm
- moving the shifters from the downtube to the handlebars
- improving the materials
- changing pedal/shoe retention from clips and straps to cleats.
I'd argue the more recent changes are far more significant. They've changed the road bike from a device that was wholly mechanical to a more complex system that involves electronics and hydraulics and makes the mechanical features less accessible and more likely to be proprietary.
Rather than thinking that these changes will lead to another great, long 40-year period of relative stability, I'd think that we'll see more change as new opportunities to use electronics are tested.
At the same time, I think that "traditional" road bikes will continue to be built and used -- wholly mechanical, rim brakes, etc. -- so maybe the result is just greater product diversity, less clarity on what a road bike is, and above all, hopefully more people finding one they like. If more people are out on bikes, in my mind it's not the dark ages.
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I don't know if we're entering a dark age of road bikes, but we definitely are in a dark age of bike forums.
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Bad enough that I forget to charge my tail light. I don't want to forget to charge my shifting system.
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I've said this many times but the current trend in gearing towards sup-par design with huge gaps and horrible demands on the chain will be reversed and go back. Triple fronts with tight cassettes in the rear that will perform immensely better because of electronic shifting controlling the Front Derailleur. The marketing writes itself. Just look at all the debate about gearing in this thread alone. Everyone will eat it up as long as it's done in a way to make it look like nothing that has come before.
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The only possible progress on that front I can envision is 3D-printed 6Al4V (as already done by Bastion for frame lugs), and maybe carbon nanotubes in a more useful length; but as far as the latter goes the aerospace industry will probably hog it all for a decade or two. They need long nanotubes to make space elevators possible, and that application will require thousands of tonnes of the stuff.
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Yeah, and you're facing way less aero drag on those cogs than 11/10/9.
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That's right, everyone just keep ignoring the fact electronic shifting can potentially enable a half-step triple that's easy to shift.
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Another thing that's non-trivial is the chance that the road bike is very near its apex, since it's increasingly looking like civilisation itself is past its own. Without accountable government, the only thing in the tins that say all that great stuff about national endeavour and flourishment is naked corruption. Without anything it says on the tin being done, we don't have adequate measures in place to sustain our populace, our environment, and our industry. Without all that, we don't have the road bike anymore. We don't even have roads.
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Dont doubt that there will be changes. Some with a real advantage and some that are sales hype.
A little history. About 1900 give or take, some one in the patent office made the statement that everything that can be invented already has been.
Another point is will the "real cyclist" adopt improvements. I remember back when click shifting first came out, a hard core bunch said it wouldnt work right. Now we are in the middle of disc brake adoption. The hard core still wont admit the advantages of disc brakes.
Bring it on inventers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A little history. About 1900 give or take, some one in the patent office made the statement that everything that can be invented already has been.
Another point is will the "real cyclist" adopt improvements. I remember back when click shifting first came out, a hard core bunch said it wouldnt work right. Now we are in the middle of disc brake adoption. The hard core still wont admit the advantages of disc brakes.
Bring it on inventers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Since THIS is a real issue, I can see some innovations like maybe a swing-down arm that can come off the chainstay and hold up your bike when you need to get off of it.
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Half-step triple, using double gear ~~~ 6400 STI rebuild walkthrough ~~~ Want 8/9/10s @126mm OLD? OCR. ~~~ Shimano cassette body overhaul ~~~ Ergopower Escape wear repair ~~~ PSA: drivetrain wear
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Sheldon Brown's bike info ~~~ Park Tools repair help
Half-step triple, using double gear ~~~ 6400 STI rebuild walkthrough ~~~ Want 8/9/10s @126mm OLD? OCR. ~~~ Shimano cassette body overhaul ~~~ Ergopower Escape wear repair ~~~ PSA: drivetrain wear
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#73
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That's why one or two of us are talking about gearing; it's not super fundamental, but it's the last factor of any import that still has appreciable room for improvement.
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Half-step triple, using double gear ~~~ 6400 STI rebuild walkthrough ~~~ Want 8/9/10s @126mm OLD? OCR. ~~~ Shimano cassette body overhaul ~~~ Ergopower Escape wear repair ~~~ PSA: drivetrain wear
List of US/Canada bike co-ops ~~~ Global list
Sheldon Brown's bike info ~~~ Park Tools repair help
Half-step triple, using double gear ~~~ 6400 STI rebuild walkthrough ~~~ Want 8/9/10s @126mm OLD? OCR. ~~~ Shimano cassette body overhaul ~~~ Ergopower Escape wear repair ~~~ PSA: drivetrain wear
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#74
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I started riding just before index shifting (Shimano SIS) became a thing. I remember shifting w/o indexing being the most annoying thing on the planet as one had to constant micro-adjust the shifter, which was inconveniently located on the down tube, until the noise went away from a misaligned derailleur. To me, this was a no-brainer that there must be a better way and could even theorize that simply indexing the shifting would solve the issue (I just had no means to make it happen).
Toe clips were the next obvious area of the big that needed improvement as getting one's foot stuck in a toe-clip and falling over was just silly. Once again, just about anyone who rode a race bike with old fashioned toe-clips knew there must be a better way.
Fast forward to today, I can't think of anything on my bike that annoys me or needs obvious improvement. All my gripes of the past have pretty much been addressed by what is currently available on the market.
#75
Senior Member
I like my traditional, all mechanical rim-braked road bikes, yet these are the improvements I think would be neat:
Improved materials:
Spider silk -- Once this stuff can be manufactured commercially, I hope my next set of tubular tires weigh less than a morning breeze, can stop a bullet or hold up a bridge, and flex with the suppleness of sheer negligee. Scraping the moths off of them at the end of the ride will be a small price to pay.
Nanocelluluse fibers -- It's my dream, so I'll say the hype is correct, and they turn out stronger, lighter and less expensive than carbon fibers. Mixed with the spider silk above, I've got a set of wheels that weigh less than 800g than can double up on dirt drops.
Charge-responsive materials -- like muscles, these materials will respond to weak electric signals and can instantly become more or less rigid as the situation demands. As soon as your bike sense power output climb, it tenses up, providing more stiffness where needed. When you're noodling along in the pack, the ride is as plush as can be. Especially since your saddle is like a spider silk hammock.
Technical advances:
Automatic infinite transmission: With a spider silk pulley cord instead of a chain, and a charge-responsive drivewheel and cog that can grow or shrink as needed, your drive ratio instantly adjusts as the bike senses your torque and power output. It further trims it based on heart rate and everything it senses going on with your metabolism and mood.
Car safety override: This system insures that no cars that can operate on the road will collide with you. For smart-road legal cars, it overrides all other programing to make sure you're not hit. For illegal dumb cars, it sends out a micro pulse to kill the engine as soon as they are within a one-mile range.
Net effect
A 2 percent gain in speed is expected, but not gauranteed. A Tour rider on a 90s bike will still be much, much faster.
Improved materials:
Spider silk -- Once this stuff can be manufactured commercially, I hope my next set of tubular tires weigh less than a morning breeze, can stop a bullet or hold up a bridge, and flex with the suppleness of sheer negligee. Scraping the moths off of them at the end of the ride will be a small price to pay.
Nanocelluluse fibers -- It's my dream, so I'll say the hype is correct, and they turn out stronger, lighter and less expensive than carbon fibers. Mixed with the spider silk above, I've got a set of wheels that weigh less than 800g than can double up on dirt drops.
Charge-responsive materials -- like muscles, these materials will respond to weak electric signals and can instantly become more or less rigid as the situation demands. As soon as your bike sense power output climb, it tenses up, providing more stiffness where needed. When you're noodling along in the pack, the ride is as plush as can be. Especially since your saddle is like a spider silk hammock.
Technical advances:
Automatic infinite transmission: With a spider silk pulley cord instead of a chain, and a charge-responsive drivewheel and cog that can grow or shrink as needed, your drive ratio instantly adjusts as the bike senses your torque and power output. It further trims it based on heart rate and everything it senses going on with your metabolism and mood.
Car safety override: This system insures that no cars that can operate on the road will collide with you. For smart-road legal cars, it overrides all other programing to make sure you're not hit. For illegal dumb cars, it sends out a micro pulse to kill the engine as soon as they are within a one-mile range.
Net effect
A 2 percent gain in speed is expected, but not gauranteed. A Tour rider on a 90s bike will still be much, much faster.