Categories: La Vie Velominatus

La Vie Velominatus: Cable Obsession

Cable organization perfection: resistance is futile.

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:

  1. It is of paramount importance that the housing exit the bar tape at precisely opposite points on the bars. This extends beyond the cables taken in aggregate, and applies to both the brake and shift housing meaning that if they are routed together, the brake cable must always be below the shift cable, and if they are route front/back on the bars, they must both be routed in the same fashion.
  2. The housing must be organized such that they mimic and mirror each other’s curves to the maximum capability of the frame and application. This is to say that housing intersections and contact points must be minimized and under no circumstances may a shift-brake cable pair be split by another cable running from its mirrored set.
  3. Cable housing must be cut to the shortest length possible while still allowing full movement of the handlebars. It must, however, be cut long enough to allow that the cables run in a smooth curve at all points, minimizing friction. The shift cables should be cut such that they overlap only slightly; the ideal is that they just kiss each other at the apex of their arch to the frame.
  4. Inner cables must be cut to a length not exceeding 2cm. The ideal length is 1.5 times the length of the cable end.
  5. Cable ends will always be crimped using a crimping tool. Extra points awarded for a diagonal double-crimp. Under no circumstances are frayed cables to be tolerated.

Go with Merckx, and do not violate these principles. Vive la Vie Velominatus.

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frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • Also I run my brakes moto-style, and due to the forward most stop for the rear being biased to the non-driveside of the top tube there is a really tight bend in that cable.  It has eaten up the headtube powder coat a bit.

  • Di2 routing? Where to clip the control box? Should the cable be wrapped around the cable? I've seen some people use heat shrink tubing to keep it aligned with the brake cable - is that the best way?

  • Not my bike, but I like this EPS routing - except the cable looks too long for my liking

  • @brett

    What, exactly, was the point of posting this? The cabling is going to be completely out of whack as a result of the ridiculous spacer stack height, the bar tape looks fucking awful and to crown it all, it's got mountain bike pedals.

    Or is that all just and illusion?

  • @frank

    Whilst i can understand your focus there's another couple of areas regarding cabling that drives me nuts.

    1. The crossing of gear cables under the downtube. Please no, it just looks dreadful. It's amazing how many bikes you see it on.

    2. On bikes with curved top tubes, the routing of the rear brake cable can be tricky. The lazy, and wholly unacceptable choice is to be left with a cable that doesn't follow the contour of the tube. Looks bloody awful. The only real way around this is to go internal, and that has its own set of problems....

  • Chris, you forgot just the most important. That guy is using the X cable cross below the diagonal tube. As you can see, left housing cross just once, not twive. It's a sigle kiss, normally is a double kiss. Left housing goes to the right side, and right housing house to the left side.

    Very radcial, and very neat. mine are like that too. Only real fanatics do the X cable. Frank: you are not so obsessed as you though, here i´m way worse. so congratulations. but still your cable housing is just not there. and btw that brake housing you are using is damn ugly.

  • @brett

    Jesus, you know you can cut those cables, right? Fucking hell, those are way too fucking long. And your finishing job on the tape is atrocious. I expect much more from a Keeper.

    Per Rule 73, the crossover is optional, not to mention impossible with internally routed cables. Regarding all your other bullshit, I'll say again: internally routed cables.

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