Need To Source Campy Parts
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Need To Source Campy Parts
Hi Everyone, we are having torrential rains here and freezing temps and I am taking advantage of it to do some maintenance on my Litespeed Arenberg and I am trying as much as possible to not cut corners and I am using wherever possible Campy parts but I am having a hard time with their terminology and parts schemes. My bike has the Campy Centaur 10-speed groupset circa 2002. I have been looking on the Campy web site campagnolo.com/us/en trying to get part numbers to make sure I buy the right stuff for my bike and to me their site is confusing. I don't see where they have an "Archived" section for parts and my searches come up blank. Can someone point me to where I need to be looking and how I need to form my searches to get the information I need?
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
#2
Advocatus Diaboli
Join Date: Feb 2015
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Bikes: Merlin Cyrene, Nashbar steel CX
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Hi Everyone, we are having torrential rains here and freezing temps and I am taking advantage of it to do some maintenance on my Litespeed Arenberg and I am trying as much as possible to not cut corners and I am using wherever possible Campy parts but I am having a hard time with their terminology and parts schemes. My bike has the Campy Centaur 10-speed groupset circa 2002. I have been looking on the Campy web site campagnolo.com/us/en trying to get part numbers to make sure I buy the right stuff for my bike and to me their site is confusing. I don't see where they have an "Archived" section for parts and my searches come up blank. Can someone point me to where I need to be looking and how I need to form my searches to get the information I need?
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
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#4
Newbie
Hi Everyone, we are having torrential rains here and freezing temps and I am taking advantage of it to do some maintenance on my Litespeed Arenberg and I am trying as much as possible to not cut corners and I am using wherever possible Campy parts but I am having a hard time with their terminology and parts schemes. My bike has the Campy Centaur 10-speed groupset circa 2002. I have been looking on the Campy web site campagnolo.com/us/en trying to get part numbers to make sure I buy the right stuff for my bike and to me their site is confusing. I don't see where they have an "Archived" section for parts and my searches come up blank. Can someone point me to where I need to be looking and how I need to form my searches to get the information I need?
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
Also, someone here on this web site posted a link to a place on the Campy web site that gave a break down on the order in which the cogset goes together and where each individual spacer fits into the pattern. I thought I had made a not of this useful information but now I can't find it. Can someone also point me to the post here that had the link or can someone give me the link to this information on the Campy web site? Thanks, it is most appreciated.
I have similar vintage, 1999/2000 record parts available for sale. front and rear derailleur, brakes, cranks (no bottom bracket) and brake handles (right side/rear derailleur need to be rebuilt).
If you are interested PM me.
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#5
Used to be Conspiratemus
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Be aware that there is a 12-30 version of the Centaur cassette not listed in the 2002 catalogue, presumably later. If you have one of those, the gold-amber “K” spacers between the loose sprockets are all the same thickness (2.6 mm) so nothing to mix up. None have ears.
If your cassette is one is one of the Centaurs in the catalogue, the spacers with ears have different thicknesses, hence different part numbers. The catalogue doesn’t make it clear how to tell them apart if they get jumbled. So from the package leaflet for mine the order is, from largest to smallest (as you would install them):
-first two riveted together as one segment
-spacer “M” is smoky grey metal with ears 3.05 mm
-spacer “N”, smoky grey metal with ears, 2.4 mm, so obviously thinner than M despite similar appearance
-spacer “O”, blue metal with ears, 2.55 mm. Has “6 - spacer - 7” engraved on it.
-next spacer is either another N (for cassettes going to 26 or 29 teeth), or a plastic “Q” spacer (for 23 or 25 max). Both types are 2.4 mm thick.
-remaining spacers are plastic Q’s.
-smallest sprocket doesn’t use a separate spacer.
All the eared spacers go with the flat face against the larger sprocket, i.e., facing toward the spokes so you are looking at the face with ridges.
If your Centaur cassette has the two largest sprockets loose, a much thinner “P” spacer 1.6 mm with ears goes between them.
If your cassette is one is one of the Centaurs in the catalogue, the spacers with ears have different thicknesses, hence different part numbers. The catalogue doesn’t make it clear how to tell them apart if they get jumbled. So from the package leaflet for mine the order is, from largest to smallest (as you would install them):
-first two riveted together as one segment
-spacer “M” is smoky grey metal with ears 3.05 mm
-spacer “N”, smoky grey metal with ears, 2.4 mm, so obviously thinner than M despite similar appearance
-spacer “O”, blue metal with ears, 2.55 mm. Has “6 - spacer - 7” engraved on it.
-next spacer is either another N (for cassettes going to 26 or 29 teeth), or a plastic “Q” spacer (for 23 or 25 max). Both types are 2.4 mm thick.
-remaining spacers are plastic Q’s.
-smallest sprocket doesn’t use a separate spacer.
All the eared spacers go with the flat face against the larger sprocket, i.e., facing toward the spokes so you are looking at the face with ridges.
If your Centaur cassette has the two largest sprockets loose, a much thinner “P” spacer 1.6 mm with ears goes between them.
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#6
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Be aware that there is a 12-30 version of the Centaur cassette not listed in the 2002 catalogue, presumably later. If you have one of those, the gold-amber “K” spacers between the loose sprockets are all the same thickness (2.6 mm) so nothing to mix up. None have ears.
If your cassette is one is one of the Centaurs in the catalogue, the spacers with ears have different thicknesses, hence different part numbers. The catalogue doesn’t make it clear how to tell them apart if they get jumbled. So from the package leaflet for mine the order is, from largest to smallest (as you would install them):
-first two riveted together as one segment
-spacer “M” is smoky grey metal with ears 3.05 mm
-spacer “N”, smoky grey metal with ears, 2.4 mm, so obviously thinner than M despite similar appearance
-spacer “O”, blue metal with ears, 2.55 mm. Has “6 - spacer - 7” engraved on it.
-next spacer is either another N (for cassettes going to 26 or 29 teeth), or a plastic “Q” spacer (for 23 or 25 max). Both types are 2.4 mm thick.
-remaining spacers are plastic Q’s.
-smallest sprocket doesn’t use a separate spacer.
All the eared spacers go with the flat face against the larger sprocket, i.e., facing toward the spokes so you are looking at the face with ridges.
If your Centaur cassette has the two largest sprockets loose, a much thinner “P” spacer 1.6 mm with ears goes between them.
If your cassette is one is one of the Centaurs in the catalogue, the spacers with ears have different thicknesses, hence different part numbers. The catalogue doesn’t make it clear how to tell them apart if they get jumbled. So from the package leaflet for mine the order is, from largest to smallest (as you would install them):
-first two riveted together as one segment
-spacer “M” is smoky grey metal with ears 3.05 mm
-spacer “N”, smoky grey metal with ears, 2.4 mm, so obviously thinner than M despite similar appearance
-spacer “O”, blue metal with ears, 2.55 mm. Has “6 - spacer - 7” engraved on it.
-next spacer is either another N (for cassettes going to 26 or 29 teeth), or a plastic “Q” spacer (for 23 or 25 max). Both types are 2.4 mm thick.
-remaining spacers are plastic Q’s.
-smallest sprocket doesn’t use a separate spacer.
All the eared spacers go with the flat face against the larger sprocket, i.e., facing toward the spokes so you are looking at the face with ridges.
If your Centaur cassette has the two largest sprockets loose, a much thinner “P” spacer 1.6 mm with ears goes between them.
#7
Junior Member
Thread Starter