Michael,

Which Campy front derailleur are you using?

BC

On Apr 22, 7:38 pm, Michael Hechmer <[email protected]> wrote:
> What FD are you using?  I certainly appreciate your desire to minimize
> front shifts.  I switched back to a 44/30 double with the expectation I
> could reduce them, and I certainly have.  But I also found that my 105
> derailler wouldn't work across such a small front and so switched to the
> Campy, and as a result got such excellent front shifting that I no longer
> give it much thought.  Instead I pay more attention to front shifts in the
> middle of the cassettes and having a nice straight chain line.   I have
> also found that having a difference of 10 teeth is optimal, because it
> produces a simple shifting pattern - after shifting rings I am always one
> cog from the next gear.  But this combo lacks range and so only really
> works well in a triple.  Experimentation has taught me that a difference of
> twelve leaves me between gears and sixteen not only creates a very slow
> upshift but also requires searching for the next gear in the back.  A
> difference of 14 seems to be a nice compromise, with a decent front shift
> and two clicks in the back to the next gear.  Often, in rolling terrain,
> that front shift gives me exactly the gear I want.
>
> Michael
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sunday, April 22, 2012 12:41:48 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> > Thanks, Michael -- more questions below.
>
> > I should have been clearer that all of this rigmarole and these questions
> > are premised on the desire to shift between rings as little as possible.
> > Obviously, swapping out the 46/36/24 triple to a, say, 38/24 double would
> > help greatly, but OTOH, the current triple has its own advantages, not the
> > least of which it is already in place. The the question about using as many
> > cogs as possible with the 46 and the 36.
>
> > On Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 8:39 PM, Michael Hechmer <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> >> On Saturday, April 21, 2012 9:28:47 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> >>> 1. Is there any harm in riding the 46 up to cog #7? Note that this hub
> >>> is an 8/9 speed hub with extra spacers behind the big cogs. There is 
> >>> plenty
> >>> of chain and the derailleur cage is just for'ard of vertical when in the
> >>> big cog -- ie, nothing is really stretched -- I deliberately added extra
> >>> slack for this.
>
> >>> Not such a good idea, since the chain angle increases friction and wear
> >> on the chain, rings and cogs.  Besides, If you drop from the 46x22 down to
> >> the 36 you will get the next gear, a better gear spacing, and a straighter
> >> chain line all the way down to 31.
>
> > Is this because of the inward position of #7, or because of its size? Note
> > again that the 34 (or the 29) is in effect the third ring from the inside
> > since I installed only 7 cogs out of a possible 9. Once again, there is
> > plenty of chain slack. Second opinion, then, about the 46/34?
>
> >> 2. Can I use the 36 with cog #1?
>
> >>> Why not?  It will work OK, but if you're going to be there for a long
> >> time, the 46x20 will be a little better.
>
> > Good to know. Most of my dirt riding is in our river valley bosque which
> > is pancake flat except for the occasional steep, short grunt up onto a
> > levee, so the 46 provides ample range (this is the context for that "46/34"
> > question). But if I ride in dirt in hillier terrain -- say in Rio Rancho's
> > sand hills and in the east mountain foothills -- the range on the 36 will
> > be very desirable.
>
> >>>   BIG APPLES KOJAKS  *46* 36 24  *46* 36 24  16 83 65  15 83 65  18 74
> >>> 58  17 73 57  *20* *67* 52  *18* *69* 54  22 61 47 32 19 65 51 34  26 51
> >>> 40 27 21 59 46 31  30 44 35 23 24 52 41 27  34 39 31 20 29 43 34 22
> >>> I am still debating whether one of these has any real advantage for me:
>
> >>>     36 24  38 24  11 88  12 92   12 81  13 85   13 75  14 79   14 69  16
> >>> 69   16 61  17 65   19 51 34  20 55 35  23 44 28  24 46 29  29 35 23  28
> >>> 39 25  34 30 20  36 31 19
>
> >> The 12 will last longer than the 11 and you have more useful gears off
> >> the 24 than you are showing.  You will need a short cage FD, like the
> >> campy, to make this work without running the derailler into the chain stay,
> >> and still be close enough to a 38 to shift smoothly.
>
> > If I do switch to a double, it will very likely be with a 38 and a small
> > cog of 12. I'll have to play with the current (LX?) fd. For one thing, the
> > whole point of this exercise is to decrease fd shifting; second, I intend
> > to install a bash guard in the outer position; and third, I rarely use the
> > granny in the conditions I ride in: the hills are short enough that I stand
> > and grunt or, if sand is involved on hill or flat and I can't power through
> > it in a 50- or 60- something gear, it is usually too deep to allow shifting
> > into the granny: by the time I manage the shift, I've bogged and fall over.
> > (So to speak.) Also, I am sure I will be grateful for it if I ever tour.
>
> > Fun stuff, this gearing nonsense! If I bore y'all with it, enter a
> > subscription to collect enough to buy me a nice ss 29er.
>
> >>> Don't wait up for me: I have been a gear nerd, freak, obsessive, fanatic
> >>> for over 20 years despite fixed gear riding and I love the subject. Frank
> >>> Berto has nothing on me.
>
> >>> Patrick Moore, who does actually ride his bikes and just had a
> >>> wonderfully pleasant and fast 20 mile dirt ride (flat) on the Fargo in the
> >>> 46X20.
> >>> --
>
> >>> -------------------------
> >>> Patrick Moore, Albuquerque, NM
> >>> For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
> >>>http://resumespecialties.com/**index.html<http://resumespecialties.com/index.html>
> >>> -------------------------
>
> >>> A billion stars go spinning through the night
> >>> Blazing high above your head;
> >>> But in you is the Presence that will be
> >>> When all the stars are dead.
>
> >>> Ranier Maria Rilke, Buddha in Glory
>
> >>  --
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>
> > --
>
> > -------------------------
> > Patrick Moore, Albuquerque, NM
> > For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
> >http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
> > -------------------------
>
> > A billion stars go spinning through the night
> > Blazing high above your head;
> > But in you is the Presence that will be
> > When all the stars are dead.
>
> > Ranier Maria Rilke, Buddha in Glory

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