I’m fluent in three languages: Dutch, English, and Hyperbole. The third is an acquired talent developed by creative and narcissistic tendencies; the narcissism feeds a belief that normal words can’t properly describe the magnitude of my experiences, and the creativity struggles to cope with restrictive paradigms like “facts” and “reality”. I have also been diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder which, when taken with everything else, suggests that my darling partner exhibits some questionable judgement.
I have a visceral response to clutter; when I see things out of order, my insides turn about themselves and cause me physical discomfort. If the clutter escalates to becoming a “mess”, my mood changes and I become irritable. This applies to everything from our house, my workshop, my office, desk space, my computer desktop, my briefcase, and my bicycles’ cable organization. I don’t have to tell you that the last one is the only one that really matters.
The tidiness of the cables on a bicycle are one of several key factors that elevate the Velominatus above the Common Cyclist. The old style of STI shifters and their protruding cables were barbaric; they represented a principle reason for my dislike of Shimano’s system. Campagnolo took a few extra years to produce the Ergo shifters, and I am quite convinced they spent that extra time sorting out how to internally route the cables.
The organization of a rider’s cables and the length to which they are trimmed is a critical detail to which we must all pay close attention. No matter how beautiful the bike, disheveled cables will always bring it down. I hereby give you the V Principles of Cable Routing:
Go with Merckx, and do not violate these principles. Vive la Vie Velominatus.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Cables/”/]
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@Fausto
While we're at it, shall we move the rear brake to the foot peg and put a clutch in the right lever? You may have stumble upon Velominati by accident while you were looking for BRMC.
@Ron
BBB also do them.
@Nate Your method of cutting housing with sacrificial cable bit, brilliant. That never occurred to me.
@frank Your CX bike with all that orange paint, dogs bollocks man, need that orange on all the Veloformas. Too much black and not enough orange makes a man weak.
@mouse So that's why it no longer worked! I was trying acid core solder and all kinds of shit, different torches, nothing stuck, thanks for the hint. I'll search for that. What is the % silver? WIll plumbing flux work or is that shiet too?
@Chris
Roger's suggestion of clear Park tube patches is good. Just protect the frame with those, and they are semi-permanent. Or a section of clear vinyl tubing of the correct (or smaller) ID would work, just slit it and slide it over the housing.
@Gianni
Below a picture of the tools required for cable brazing.
@Gianni
I've also seen cables with a small rubber o-ring threaded on to prevent cable/frame contact. Very tidy. I've had difficulty finding a supply of ones that are small enough though.
@TommyTubolare
*From a conversation today with a former pro mechanic...
"Pro mechanics are just as capable of being wrong as Frank. Plus they rarely have time to worry about exact cable lengths or routing - close enough is good enough. Most (pro) riders just want their position and gears dialled and they couldn't give a shit about the rest, so the mechanics get lazier about the OCD details too..."
And we know Pros also run EPMSs, so you can't use that to justify them either.
@brett
Probably why he's a "former" pro mechanic.
(winky face)
@mouse
problem with those small rubber O-rings is that you normally have to buy them in packets of 1,000,000,000
After youve used the initial 4 rings what the fck to do with the rest ?
Maybe sell them back to Guinea Pig farmers as castration rings for the males ?
A neat cable end fix is..... shrink tubing. Easy on (still have your old Zippo?), easy off (fingernails), comes in colors (should you be so inclined) and weighs less than nothing....