I’ve never been able to decide if choices are a gift or a curse; a lack of choices introduces simplicity but also with it the risk that the simple choices do not meet the demands of a complex world. An abundance of similar choices, on the other hand, often reduces the impact of getting things a little bit wrong, but also decreases the thoughtfulness in decision making. Finally, having many divergent choices mostly just leads to a lot of planning and ultimately indecision, assuming my experience in Corporate America is anything to go by.
These days, we tend to ride bicycles with 10 or 11 speed clusters made up of sprockets that are closely matched to their neighbors. This development removes the rider somewhat from the art of gear selection, a fact carried further by bar-mounted shifters; as gradients increase and decrease, we glide from gear to gear maintaining our cadence with hardly any consideration given to the ratios hard at work for us. It is a beautiful freedom to ride like this, but it is also another degree of separation between rider and machine.
I recently read an interview with Sean Kelly, who was discussing his defeat at the hands of Greg Lemond during the 1989 World Championship Road Race. With only seven sprockets at his disposal over a route slightly too hilly for a rider of his ilk, he was faced with a difficult choice: spare the legs on the climb with a 25T at the bottom end, or hamper his sprint with a 13T at the top end.
Kelly faced a tough decision: mount a gear that would carry him over the climb to contend the finale with the handicap of a 13T, or overload the cannons on too big a gear for the climb and never have the chance to go for the win in the first place. He deliberated over the decision while training on the course and finally decided for the low gear. Kelly made it over the climbs to contest the sprint, but his 53×13 was hopelessly outmatched by LeMan’s monster 54×12.
More recently, the Cycling world was aflutter about Tony Martin’s choice to ride a 58T front chain ring during a time trail. This wasn’t a display of bravado but rather a highly refined choice of chain line: knowing the speeds he wanted to ride, he chose his big ring in such a size that would provide the straightest chain line in the gear he’d be riding in during the majority of the race. The result was less friction, and a Tour de France stage win under his belt.
There is an art to gear and cluster choice that is nearly lost with today’s expanding sprocket ranges, but it remains within our grasp if only we are willing to seek it out. Don’t settle for knowing the maximum and minimum size gears in your block; know exactly which gears you have across the board, and understand what sizes you’ll be missing and gaining when switching between 11-23, 12-25 and 13-26 – there is more to it than just taking one off one end and slapping it on the other.
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12-25 all the way and I have no intention of moving to 11 spd. Luddite? Not really, I just cannot see the point. It's like disc brakes, electronic shifting etc etc, they just want to sell us more stuff.
Good article though.
I suspect that no one is truly educated on gear philosophy until they have done the Devil Mountain Double a few times. When you get to the top of Sierra Road, look at the route sheet and discover another 5000' of climbing, your perspective changes a bit.
@Rom
that's just what sram wants you to believe! i've got 2011 force (so, 10s) working with the new force 22 yaw FD (which, btw, is half the price of the 10s red yaw FD). and i've read reports of people using rival with the yaw derailleurs with no problems. the yaw is awesome, seriously. always hated my force FD and even changed to an ultegra one for a bit, but the yaw is much better; perfect, actually.
as for me, gearing-wise, i'm very happy with 11-25 and 50/36. i changed to this last summer after having basically always been on 53/39 and hated having to use a 27 or 28 in the back (needed occasionally for some of the 20+% gradients around here). now i have essentially the equivalent of 53/39 and 12-27 (although 50x11 > 53x12), but it weighs less and i have a better chain-line for flat riding. i tried 52/36, btw, but i hated the 16-tooth jump between rings and 50 allows me to stay in the big ring longer.
@Rom
I keep hearing this, but my Red shifters have trim so I don't understand where this rumor comes from. You do, however, have to adjust it correctly.
Only trim in the big ring. You need to adjust the stopper screw to be microns away from the inner face when in small big. While I don't do it often, I can ride all 10 in the little with no noise.
Gentlemen. It is as always inspiring and interesting to read the various views on a topic that only very few outside the cycling world would know the significance of. While I understand that some select their gears following complicated formulas involving fitness and terrain, my simple approach is trying to deny the fact that 15 years has passed since I rode my last race on the UCI calendar. 53/39 and 12-23 is still my setup, and 39 is never used in public. The consequence is of course that my guns from time to time feels like overheated 5.56's and not like the 12.5's like they once were.
_______
I'm new around here - been lurking for a year or so. Couldn't find an intro thread, so not sure where to make the introduction. In short I can answer yes to the following:
* Have you lived by the rules?
* Do you think that the "V" mentioned in the "Da Vinci Code" refers to this site?
* Do you shave your guns?
@frank
I was shocked and appalled to see that Shimano offers an 11-32 cassette at the Ultegra level. 2x hill repeats for anyone with such an abomination on their steed.
@bear
Welcome, and obviously you are going to fit in perfectly. The bolded phrase highlights this fact. Denial is a lifestyle.
And, since you've stuck around for a year, I assume you would also answer yes to this question: Is the movie Team America funny?
@paolo
#Disagree ;-)
@frank
Imagine my surprise when I cleaned my new 11-speed Ultegra cogs for the first time tonight...