The new derailer you referenced is from SunXCD. The actual name of the 
component is an indecipherable mass of letters and numbers, so I guess we 
just call it The SunXCD Rear Derailer. http://sunxcd.net/rearder/

On Wednesday, June 18, 2014 6:28:54 AM UTC-7, Jim Bronson wrote:
>
> The 10 speed Shimano MTB "Dyna-Sys" parts aren't only group-specific, they 
> are incompatible with road indexed shifters.  The cable pull is different.  
> Folks on here and elsewhere say to use a 9 speed MTB derailer if you want a 
> 10 speed indexed setup.
>
> I'm using a long cage silver Chorus 10 speed (early '00s) on my Rivendell 
> with an 11-30 9 speed Shimano cassette and Shimano bar end shifters and 
> it's working fine with 46-36-26 chainrings in the front.  The Chorus was 
> rated to handle 29, so jumping to 30 doesn't seem like much of a stretch.
>
> I've thought about going 11-34 or even 12-36 on the back to try to get me 
> up one particular hill on our local brevets that I have walked every time 
> this year.  But I feel this would require a MTB derailer, so I haven't done 
> it yet.  The new derailer I really like the looks of is the new Suntour 
> XCE.  It's basically a polished silver Microshift and it is pretty.  But it 
> comes at a premium, I've seen it online for around $100 whereas the Deore 
> can be had for less than $50.  I really want it though so maybe I'll sell 
> some more stuff I'm not using and get it.
>
>
> On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 6:17 AM, Joe Bernard <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> I'm a bit of a derailer snob, so I understand your qualms about the basic 
>> Deore rear mech. My Heron runs a nice, light, silver mid-90's Deore XT, and 
>> another bike uses a lovely and rare US-made Precision Billet derailer from 
>> the same era. If you want a nice Shimano MTB rear derailer, you can't go 
>> wrong with XTR bits. The newest "Dyna-Sys" 10-speed parts might be a little 
>> too group-specific (and pricey), but anything before that will work fine 
>> with friction. Finding one on Ebay that hasn't been scratched-to-heck could 
>> be tough, though. For new, those MicroSHIFT mechs Riv sells are nice 
>> looking.
>>
>> Joe Bernard
>> Vallejo, CA.
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, June 17, 2014 7:56:49 PM UTC-7, Michael wrote:
>>
>>> MTB derailers or Road derailers.
>>>
>>> What's the diff, if anything?
>>>
>>> I know RBW seems to like MTB derailers for all their current build 
>>> kits (Deore).
>>>
>>> Any benefits to Road 8-speed derailers over MTB?
>>>
>>> I am under the assumption that any 8-speed Road parts are going to have 
>>> to be NOS or used, because looks like 8-speed derailers don't exist anymore 
>>> in current production offerings as of 2014?
>>>
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>
>
>
> -- 
> Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down! 
>

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