Short Cage RD NOT for triples? Really?
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Short Cage RD NOT for triples? Really?
I know this has been discussed ad nauseam, but I was bike pRon roving and found this beautiful example of a salsa drop bar mtb built by the guy that was building for salsa bikes. There were two models of the XT line up; the long cage and short cage. The man used a short cage!!

1984 Salsa Custom #37 - Vintage Mountain Bike Workshop

1984 Salsa Custom #37 - Vintage Mountain Bike Workshop
Last edited by thook; 01-12-22 at 05:04 PM.
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Here's another one....

I mean, if it was/is such a bad idea, then why were the pro's doing it? Were they just insane mavericks? There had/has to be some genuine benefit/reason it was practiced.

I mean, if it was/is such a bad idea, then why were the pro's doing it? Were they just insane mavericks? There had/has to be some genuine benefit/reason it was practiced.
Last edited by thook; 01-12-22 at 05:02 PM.
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In the early days of Bridgestone MTBs, their higher end models were specced with short or medium cage derailleurs and triple cranks. But it was considered unusual enough that they included this note in the 1991 catalog:
"This bicycle has a short-cage rear derailleur, which shifts faster, weighs less, and has more ground (or obstacle) clearance than the usual long-cage rear derailleur.
However, the small price you pay for the above advantages is that, with the chain on the inner chainwheel and the three smallest rear cogs [note: this was out of 7 total cogs], the shorter cage won't take up sufficient slack; the chain rubs on the derailleur cage, and flops around excessively over bumps.
On any mountain bike (regardless of rear derailleur), the small chainring is should be used only with the three or four largest rear cogs. For the reasons noted above, this especially important with this style rear derailleur"
(side note: the misplaced "is" in the last sentence is their error not mine.)
"This bicycle has a short-cage rear derailleur, which shifts faster, weighs less, and has more ground (or obstacle) clearance than the usual long-cage rear derailleur.
However, the small price you pay for the above advantages is that, with the chain on the inner chainwheel and the three smallest rear cogs [note: this was out of 7 total cogs], the shorter cage won't take up sufficient slack; the chain rubs on the derailleur cage, and flops around excessively over bumps.
On any mountain bike (regardless of rear derailleur), the small chainring is should be used only with the three or four largest rear cogs. For the reasons noted above, this especially important with this style rear derailleur"
(side note: the misplaced "is" in the last sentence is their error not mine.)
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I worked as a mechanic at a Bridgestone dealer in 1991 and I seem to recall a LOT of confusion when discussing this with customers. I then recall that many other folks wanted to switch over to the "cool new compact shimano" setup. I definitely remember the sales point being all about the weight savings with smaller cogs, chainrings, and the shorter derailleur cage. Nothing really to add, other than it was interesting.
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I have used short cage SunTour Cyclone / Cyclone II derailleurs in two different triple setups:
1/3 step 3x5: 49-46-43 / 13-16-19-23-26
half-step + granny 3x6: 48-45-34 / 13-15-17-19-21-24
Both worked fine.
1/3 step 3x5: 49-46-43 / 13-16-19-23-26
half-step + granny 3x6: 48-45-34 / 13-15-17-19-21-24
Both worked fine.
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#7
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Its all a matter of whether the largest rear sprocket can be handled by the rear derailleur, and the total change in the number of links that must be wrapped by the derailleur cage are within its design capability. The rear derailleur only cares about those two parameters, not how many rings are on the chainset. The sizes of the rings, yes, but the number of the rings no. Master how all of that works and you, too, will be a master gear finagler! I'm pretty sure Sheldon Brown covers all of that, it's not so obscure or hard to find.
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I worked as a mechanic at a Bridgestone dealer in 1991 and I seem to recall a LOT of confusion when discussing this with customers. I then recall that many other folks wanted to switch over to the "cool new compact shimano" setup. I definitely remember the sales point being all about the weight savings with smaller cogs, chainrings, and the shorter derailleur cage. Nothing really to add, other than it was interesting.
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Its all a matter of whether the largest rear sprocket can be handled by the rear derailleur, and the total change in the number of links that must be wrapped by the derailleur cage are within its design capability. The rear derailleur only cares about those two parameters, not how many rings are on the chainset. The sizes of the rings, yes, but the number of the rings no. Master how all of that works and you, too, will be a master gear finagler! I'm pretty sure Sheldon Brown covers all of that, it's not so obscure or hard to find.
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Interesting! It's also worth remembering that even with the triple crank, the total range of these drive trains was still pretty narrow. The one with the short cage derailleur had 24-36-46 chainrings and 12-26 7 spd freewheel, so the derailleur capacity that you'd ideally want is only 36. The short cage XT DR was specced conservatively by Shimano as a max capacity of 28.
Where'd you come up with the cassette gears used? I counted 12-28 from the photo
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I found the 28 on a forum post somewhere, so easily could be wrong. The cassette values came from the specs page in the 1991 Bridgestone catalog for the MB-2, which had the short cage XT rear DR.
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Someone posted a NOS Rocky Mountain Blizzard a few years ago that had this warning on the short cage XT derailleur. These had a triple up front, of course

Last edited by coolkat; 01-12-22 at 01:31 PM.
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Link in first post doesn't work for me - and I see no link in post #2.
Is it just me?
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Is it just me?
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FWIW when pushing capacity I have found that using small/small chain sizing gives the max possible chain length / flexibility
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I've put together a couple of bike with semi-narrow range triples (49-42-32) and Campy NR/SR rear derailleurs (one with each). The chain wrap on a NR rear derailleur being what it is, I had to choose between rather narrow gearing in the rear and having some chain slack with the small-small combination. I went with the latter. The results of accidentally shifting into the big-big combination with a chain that's too short can be catastrophic so I won't do that, but accidentally shifting into the small-small with too much chain slack is usually benign.





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"This bicycle has a short-cage rear derailleur, which shifts faster, weighs less, and has more ground (or obstacle) clearance than the usual long-cage rear derailleur.
However, the small price you pay for the above advantages is that, with the chain on the inner chainwheel and the three smallest rear cogs [note: this was out of 7 total cogs], the shorter cage won't take up sufficient slack; the chain rubs on the derailleur cage, and flops around excessively over bumps."
However, the small price you pay for the above advantages is that, with the chain on the inner chainwheel and the three smallest rear cogs [note: this was out of 7 total cogs], the shorter cage won't take up sufficient slack; the chain rubs on the derailleur cage, and flops around excessively over bumps."

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#18
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edit: Okay. Had to save the images to my computer and upload them as attachments to get them to show up on the post/s. Still gotta treat the link as noted below in post #19
Last edited by thook; 01-12-22 at 05:06 PM.
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The short cage on a mtb derailer is longer than on a similar road derailer. I've swapped them and the difference was there.
They are intended for use with triples, just not combined with the x-32t cassette in most cases.
Road Fan is dead-on, the derailer's capacity and largest cog size defines what it can handle. Shimano derailers having two sprung pivots (unlike SRAM's) will handle considerably-larger than recommended largest cogs, but at some cost to shift quality going up to the largest cogs due to the fast-closing chain gap. So those shifts may have more of a jank to them.
They are intended for use with triples, just not combined with the x-32t cassette in most cases.
Road Fan is dead-on, the derailer's capacity and largest cog size defines what it can handle. Shimano derailers having two sprung pivots (unlike SRAM's) will handle considerably-larger than recommended largest cogs, but at some cost to shift quality going up to the largest cogs due to the fast-closing chain gap. So those shifts may have more of a jank to them.
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the link in post 1 doesn't work? there isn't a link for my second post. but, i'll see if i can "redo" things. for some reason the two photos i posted don't want to show up, either. in post 1 and post 2. strangely, when i hit "edit" to readd the photos, they show up again. then it shows i've edited the posted when i haven't. perhaps the site doesn't like the link or photos being shared
edit: Okay. Had to save the images to my computer and upload them as attachments to get them to show up on the post/s. Still gotta treat the link as noted below in post #19
edit: Okay. Had to save the images to my computer and upload them as attachments to get them to show up on the post/s. Still gotta treat the link as noted below in post #19
Apparently I can't connect to the link because of this: Error code: SEC_ERROR_REVOKED_CERTIFICATE
Wonky computer stuff - I get it

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If the biggest cog out back on that Salsa is a 28, a short-cage RD would prolly work just fine. If an old-school NR RD can handle a 28, why not a modern slant?
I think many people might think a long cage is needed to get all the gears, but really, who would use the smallest cogs out back with the smallest ring in front? Or big/big? Cross-chaining extremes would likely not work with this setup, but gear-smart riders know the limitations inherent in their drivetrains.
Every time I see a photo of a bike on the Forum in the big/big combination I wince a little and think "those components are going to have a shorter life than normal..."
Of course, YMMV.
DD
I think many people might think a long cage is needed to get all the gears, but really, who would use the smallest cogs out back with the smallest ring in front? Or big/big? Cross-chaining extremes would likely not work with this setup, but gear-smart riders know the limitations inherent in their drivetrains.
Every time I see a photo of a bike on the Forum in the big/big combination I wince a little and think "those components are going to have a shorter life than normal..."
Of course, YMMV.
DD
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After taking a detailed look at the rest of the bike, it seems the rider came up with a novel way of turning a rigid seatpost into a shock-absorbing one by removing the binder bolt and installing that V-shaped spring unit. If that makes sense; there doesn't seem to be any other reason for it.
Also like the brake reinforcing plate on the rear brake vice the front.
DD
Also like the brake reinforcing plate on the rear brake vice the front.
DD
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After taking a detailed look at the rest of the bike, it seems the rider came up with a novel way of turning a rigid seatpost into a shock-absorbing one by removing the binder bolt and installing that V-shaped spring unit. If that makes sense; there doesn't seem to be any other reason for it.
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