Everyone knows it’s a great idea to change out pieces of equipment the day before a group ride, especially an honorary Ronde van Vlaanderen Cogal involving steep, cobblestone climbs. There is obviously also no need to test-ride the equipment after making said change.
I remark at this point that it is rather unexpected to find an 11 speed chain inside a box labeled as being 10 speed. I also note that an 11 speed chain is not obviously narrower than its 10 speed counterpart. Once installed, it even seems to operate normally, happily jumping from one cog to the next, up and down the cassette, as you click away at it on the work stand. It gives the strong impression of being a happy chain.
This is a ruse. It is not a happy chain. In fact, it is a borderline malicious chain; it lulls the rider into a false sense of security, right until the moment that enough pressure is applied to the pedals, at which point the chain will rudely skip. The amount of pressure required to make the chain skip is dependent upon in which gear you are riding; some skip easily, some (seemingly) not at all. The ones that seemed like they didn’t skip at all were the two lowest gears. Comforting, knowing the steep cobbled climbs that were to be gobbled up towards the end of the ride, where they would be most instrumental.
As it turns out, the amount of pressure required to skip the chain is the amount applied at roughly 20% and the rider has risen out of the saddle in search of extra power. This came as quite a surprise to me, the rider, and also to those riding behind me, who used words like “ejected” and “like you hit an invisible car” to describe what they saw.
So, I can make with certainty the following observation: a 10 speed chain and 11 speed chain might not have any outward trappings of distinction between them but they are indeed very different. This difference manifests itself by one functioning as expected and the other having the capacity to eject a rider when combined with a 10 speed drivetrain. It all seems very obvious, but that doesn’t make it less true.*
There are many other examples of this I’m sure; I remember having quite a job of properly connecting my Cinelli stem to my Scott Drop-In handlebars because the diameters did not quite match. That one also resulted in some high speed handling anomalies.
There are two morals to this story. First, it matters whether your equipment is interoperable. Second, if you make a change to your gear before a big ride, for the love of Merckx, take it on a test drive.
*As it turns out, it does in fact make it less true; this should function flawlessly but it was a worn(ish) cassette that held the secret to the bikes newly discovered ejection function.
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Ha Ha - so on the same lines is it permitted to wear a Club Gilet with a V-Jersey or should I wear Club Jersey and Gilet?
Ooh the quandary.
@Teocalli
I think Rule #17 is your guide here. No Mapei jersey with Kelme shorts applies to V kit and Club gilet.
If it's cold I'll be wearing Dulwich kit because I have more warm bits than my RBS-Giant kit from Dubai.
@ChrisO
True enough - unless the new gear turns up tomorrow. Unlikely though.
@ChrisO
For me it's going to be #1 sans its carbon tubulars. There's a new set of tubs on order, some of Vittoria's latest gen tan walls but the useless twats I ordered them from emailed me at the weekend to blithely inform me that they wouldn't actually have them in stock until May.
#1 will either be shod in its Flandeien beat of Vittoria Pave, Nemesis and '90s Dura Ace or mismatched clinchers (a spoke broke a couple of weeks ago on my preferred rear) and Open Pave. It largely dependent so on whether I get round to checking whether the emergency tub holds air or not. If @frank hadn't written this post I probably wouldn't have thought to check.
@Teocalli
Oh for fucks sake that would only work if they go together. Jesus, man.
@ChrisO
Exactly, but if it's plain it might work. For example, a black gabba jersey with v-gilet is no issue.
@chris
You're welcome.
@frank
Maybe you need to go on a diet?
@frank
Yeah but which watch should I wear?
@frank
I'm surprised no-one has asked about this until now - but Frank: the BIKE; what about the bike? Is the bike OK? No scuffed hoods, I hope? No ominous bends in the handlebars or weird new angles on the brake levers? Please confirm that that beautiful machine of yours came through this unharmed!?
(Oh; and I hope that you, yourself, are OK as well, of course...)
Thanks for the confirmation, Oli!
I use KMC connectors on Campa chains. (I also use KMC connectors on KMC chains, but that is kinda a given.)
With four road bikes, I swap chains rather infrequently. My riding is spread across them all. Ha, did some quick calculations the other week. Not riding as much as I did in my younger less responsibles age, but with my daily work commute, I'm well over 10,000 kms for the year. Not staggering, but made me feel a lot better about not doing road rides five days a week, as I used to.
@ErikdR
Bike suffered some mysterious damage that I attributed to scuffing from my shoes or the cobbles. Until I washed it. At which point it turned out to be energy drink and dust. Bike remains in the blemished state it was in. (A bike that's been through Roubaix is never quite blemish free, but those are the best kinds of blemishes.)