Shifter worries
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Shifting is very light almost like butter. If it were any less tension, it wouldn't spring back!
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The cable can only be under as much tension as the derailleur spring creates. It's always the same really. When the derailleur is in any gear other than high (small cog) the spring force is always the same. The shifter just holds it in different positions to correspond with the different cogs. Unless you have a TON of housing here and some really awful housing routing the 'tension' on the cable doesn't change.
#78
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What I'm saying is that cable housing that is too short can kink and bind the cable creating even more friction/resistance vs. just the resistance of the derailleur spring. A tight loop where the cable enters the derailleur is more likely to cause the issues that some of you speak of.
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What I'm saying is that cable housing that is too short can kink and bind the cable creating even more friction/resistance vs. just the resistance of the derailleur spring. A tight loop where the cable enters the derailleur is more likely to cause the issues that some of you speak of.
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Wrong. No tight loops or excessive housing on either of my bikes that has this issue with the STI shifters. cxwrench has been a bike mechanic for at least 3 decades. I think he knows what he's talking about.
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What I'm saying is that cable housing that is too short can kink and bind the cable creating even more friction/resistance vs. just the resistance of the derailleur spring. A tight loop where the cable enters the derailleur is more likely to cause the issues that some of you speak of.
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What I'm saying is that cable housing that is too short can kink and bind the cable creating even more friction/resistance vs. just the resistance of the derailleur spring. A tight loop where the cable enters the derailleur is more likely to cause the issues that some of you speak of.
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#83
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No. I'm not wrong.
https://www.parktool.com/en-us/blog/...-cable-housing
https://bike.bikegremlin.com/8622/housing-routing/
I'll let you know what mileage mine breaks...if at all.
https://www.parktool.com/en-us/blog/...-cable-housing
https://bike.bikegremlin.com/8622/housing-routing/
I'll let you know what mileage mine breaks...if at all.
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#85
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No. I'm not wrong.
https://www.parktool.com/en-us/blog/...-cable-housing
https://bike.bikegremlin.com/8622/housing-routing/
I'll let you know what mileage mine breaks...if at all.
https://www.parktool.com/en-us/blog/...-cable-housing
https://bike.bikegremlin.com/8622/housing-routing/
I'll let you know what mileage mine breaks...if at all.
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And what is it you and they do for a living? You don't learn about bicycles just because you ride them. Sounds like your friends knowledge is as limited as yours. I build, service, and repair hundreds if not thousands of bikes every year. I've been doing so for nearly 30 years. This includes shop, pro team, national team, and world cup experience. Don't make me embarrass you.
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'Engineer'...classic. "I'm an engineer, to save time let's just assume I'm never wrong". This is the way you operate, right?
#92
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I'm not going to say that it's impossible that the cables need replacement annually. I was part of the team on an industrial machine where the scanner data cable replacement was a monthly scheduled item due to fatigue.
But there needs to be a very good reason why shifter cables need annual replacement. Like coating them in mud on a daily basis. If it is true, it doesn't speak to me of a well designed product.
And I can say that the Campagnolo Record mechanical group on my Ritchey solo breakaway has not had the cables replaced in the four years since I built it up. Maybe one year of normal use on it and it is just fine.
If they really need cable replacement once a year and you think that is unacceptable, just get Di2 or SRAM wireless, or if they will fit the cockpit, EPS. I know, big bucks there.
But there needs to be a very good reason why shifter cables need annual replacement. Like coating them in mud on a daily basis. If it is true, it doesn't speak to me of a well designed product.
And I can say that the Campagnolo Record mechanical group on my Ritchey solo breakaway has not had the cables replaced in the four years since I built it up. Maybe one year of normal use on it and it is just fine.
If they really need cable replacement once a year and you think that is unacceptable, just get Di2 or SRAM wireless, or if they will fit the cockpit, EPS. I know, big bucks there.
#93
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I'm not going to say that it's impossible that the cables need replacement annually. I was part of the team on an industrial machine where the scanner data cable replacement was a monthly scheduled item due to fatigue.
But there needs to be a very good reason why shifter cables need annual replacement. Like coating them in mud on a daily basis. If it is true, it doesn't speak to me of a well designed product.
And I can say that the Campagnolo Record mechanical group on my Ritchey solo breakaway has not had the cables replaced in the four years since I built it up. Maybe one year of normal use on it and it is just fine.
If they really need cable replacement once a year and you think that is unacceptable, just get Di2 or SRAM wireless, or if they will fit the cockpit, EPS. I know, big bucks there.
But there needs to be a very good reason why shifter cables need annual replacement. Like coating them in mud on a daily basis. If it is true, it doesn't speak to me of a well designed product.
And I can say that the Campagnolo Record mechanical group on my Ritchey solo breakaway has not had the cables replaced in the four years since I built it up. Maybe one year of normal use on it and it is just fine.
If they really need cable replacement once a year and you think that is unacceptable, just get Di2 or SRAM wireless, or if they will fit the cockpit, EPS. I know, big bucks there.
Not well designed? How much better do you think you could do? Let's hear it.
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I've said it time and time again...it's NOT THE CABLES that really need replacing (unless they're fatiguing and fraying inside the shifter) it's the HOUSING wear that causes deterioration in shifting performance. If you think it's the cables that are the problem and you just replace them it shows just how little you know. If you ride 4-5 days a week you would be doing yourself a favor if you replaced both on an annual basis.
Not well designed? How much better do you think you could do? Let's hear it.
Not well designed? How much better do you think you could do? Let's hear it.
As a system, the inner sheath is there to limit the friction. The steel structural stranded linear housing is aligned parallel to the direction of pull and should not wear, but the outer case could stretch which would definitely degrade shifting.
I know that Jagwire sells housing with a kevlar braid covering the stranded structural part of the housing.That should reduce the degradation of the housing. There are also housings made of multiple segments like the Nokon housing.
So I really don't need to design a better product. It looks to be an off the shelf item. Albeit a costly one. I put Ekar on my commuter / touring / gravel bike. If shifting performance goes down after a year, I will probably start with the braided covered Jagwire housing. The Nokon housing looks nice but it is expensive.
My solution to control cable issues has mostly been to use some form of linear electronic motion system. Linear motors or a rotary to linear gearbox. I think that is what is inside an EPS rear derailleur.
I ride 6-7 days a week in the summer, and an EPS group set doesn't have any issues, and since the cables don't flex all that much, fatigue of the power and control cables is not an issue.
I'm likely going to put an electronic motion rear derailleur on the tandem. Probably a SRAM, since the tandem is the only place I have noticed poor shifter performance.
#95
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I've said it time and time again...it's NOT THE CABLES that really need replacing (unless they're fatiguing and fraying inside the shifter) it's the HOUSING wear that causes deterioration in shifting performance. If you think it's the cables that are the problem and you just replace them it shows just how little you know. If you ride 4-5 days a week you would be doing yourself a favor if you replaced both on an annual basis.
Not well designed? How much better do you think you could do? Let's hear it.
Not well designed? How much better do you think you could do? Let's hear it.
#96
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2018 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2019 Hybrid Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Full Suspension (SRAM) Mountain bike still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
Annually? That's a lot of housing and cable to change and money spent for something that's working perfectly fine on every bike. Please tell me again why I need to change these annually?
I go through all my bikes and inspect them a few times throughout the year and the bottom line is when there is evidence of wear on cables, housings, shifters or anything...then parts will be replaced. Bike cables (and many other parts on a bike) last until performance isn’t what it should be. How long cables (or any part on a bike) lasts varies depending on MTB or road bike and the conditions the bike is exposed to. How often isn’t necessarily a set time in months, years or miles. The signs will be in how your bike is responding to shifting, braking etc.
Last night I went out and checked the cables on the brifters of both road bikes (Shimano 105) and no signs of the cables fraying.
I'm starting to think that as a bike mechanic (either in business for yourself or working for someone) that you tell people annual replacement in order to make more $$$ for yourself or the shop you work at.
#97
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2016 Hardtail (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2018 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2019 Hybrid Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Full Suspension (SRAM) Mountain bike still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
Last night I went out and checked the cables on the brifters of both road bikes (Shimano 105) and no signs of the cables fraying.
2018 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2019 Hybrid Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Fat Bike (SRAM) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2021 Road Bike (Shimano) still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
2020 Full Suspension (SRAM) Mountain bike still has original cable and housing. Shifts perfect.
Last night I went out and checked the cables on the brifters of both road bikes (Shimano 105) and no signs of the cables fraying.


#98
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^Exactly this^ With that many bikes you're not putting a ton of mileage on any of them (I'd guess there are favorites, but still...) so replacement intervals can be longer time wise. I'm talking about the riders that have one bike they ride all the time. I'd think that would have been obvious to someone as intelligent as an engineer.
#100
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The oldest bike, the 2016 hard tail mountain bike, has over 4000 miles on it right now.
The road bike (the one you indicated that I should be having problems with annually because of notorious cable problems with Shimano shifiters) has around ~2900 miles.
Neither are a problem at the moment so I'll keep riding them as is. The obvious part is that I recognize that I don't need to change my cables and housing on an annual basis based on what some guy on the internet says. And as a bonus I keep more money in bank account.
The road bike (the one you indicated that I should be having problems with annually because of notorious cable problems with Shimano shifiters) has around ~2900 miles.
Neither are a problem at the moment so I'll keep riding them as is. The obvious part is that I recognize that I don't need to change my cables and housing on an annual basis based on what some guy on the internet says. And as a bonus I keep more money in bank account.