ColorVoyeur wrote:Scotty, great work ignoring the link and spewing.
I read the article dumb *beep*
ColorVoyeur wrote:Scotty, great work ignoring the link and spewing.
b_b wrote:I think Scotty's point is they say it's "to help our athletes win races", but I also question if racers need the low gear and want the weight on the rear wheel...
iamkickstand wrote:lol the "weight" on the rear.
I would love to take this 11 speed casette and a 10 speed cassette, and an 8 speed cassette and mount it on ANY of your bikes, blindfold you, hand you your bike and see if you can tell me which cassette is on the back
lol
the weight
lol
JonathanGennick wrote:I don't like the trend towards increasingly large cogs in the back. Does anyone else not like adding weight skewed all the way to the rear of the bike like that?
Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Scotty wrote:[
I could tell the difference. The 8 speed with thumbies will shift better.![]()
Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
giantone wrote:Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
haven't tried the shadowplus XTR rd. i hear the 2013 SLX, saint, and zee will also have that tech so entry to that tech will be lower ($$).
Paul Brown wrote:giantone wrote:Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
haven't tried the shadowplus XTR rd. i hear the 2013 SLX, saint, and zee will also have that tech so entry to that tech will be lower ($$).
After trying to push the rd forward from the bottom and asking the users about it, it seems that the complete lack of chain slack would make for an ideal 1 x ?? setup. Somebody out there has tried it by now I would think. Do you know if that feature comes in a short cage?
Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
mtbfree wrote:Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
While this might work for paved/dirt road riding and some smooth trails, I wouldn't count on it working anywhere near as well as a chainguide. The shadow plus applies more tension to the chain, but it is nowhere near being "locked" in place... it merely has an internal clutch to keep it from swinging forward as quickly or as far. Chances are it will still drop chains frequently on rock gardens, roots or that bombed out section of trail leading into a corner at the bottom of a hill.
Paul Brown wrote:mtbfree wrote:Paul Brown wrote:Scotty wrote:As skeptical as I am of this, I'd still like to try one out. Personally I'd me more impressed if they can make a chainring that doesn't require a guide (and doesn't allow the chain to drop). I've tried every guide available and none of them works as well as an outer chain ring guide and an inner stop mounted on the seat tube. It would be nice to be able to ditch all that.
Has anybody tried the 2012 XTR rd (with the lock feature) in a 1x?? application? The first thing I thought when I saw one locked in place was "no more chain guide req'd."
While this might work for paved/dirt road riding and some smooth trails, I wouldn't count on it working anywhere near as well as a chainguide. The shadow plus applies more tension to the chain, but it is nowhere near being "locked" in place... it merely has an internal clutch to keep it from swinging forward as quickly or as far. Chances are it will still drop chains frequently on rock gardens, roots or that bombed out section of trail leading into a corner at the bottom of a hill.
If it moves at all I agree.
The XTR I tried to push forward is a positive lock (100%), in other words it did not move at all.
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