I still feel that variable gears are only for people over forty-five. Isn’t it better to triumph by the strength of your muscles than by the artifice of a derailleur? We are getting soft… As for me, give me a fixed gear!
– Henri Desgrange
Whenever I encounter a challenging thought or idea, I recoil instinctively. On impulse, I assume I’m an expert in the matter and proceed as usual, no worse for the wear. The secret to success is your ability to overcome adversity, after all. Another secret to success, if we are allowed two on the same day, is to always take the advice of people on the internet, so long as you sort through all the opinions and cherry-pick the ones you already agreed with.
While I’m not an expert on taking advice, I am a bit of a virtuosity when it comes to the matter of giving it – especially when it is unsolicited. Please note, however, that while I am not drunk, I have a bit of a nasty case of manflu, a fact which I am certain will make me even more trustworthy.
As any fool can see, poor old Henri – however brilliant he was – was completely bonkers (genius and insanity often occupy the same mind). Despite that, there is a thread of truth to his reasoning, which is to say that gears are often used as a psychological tool rather than a mechanical one in order to tackle the various gradients we encounter during our rides.
We typically encounter a hill from some distance off, rearing up as though some careless road engineer had forgotten to tack the other end down. And, more often than not, we respond with the impulse to deploy the Anticipation Shift: downshifting prematurely in response to the sight of a big climb. Click-click-click-click, right down the block to whatever gear you imagine you’ll need in order to ride to the top of a hill whose gradient you can’t accurately judge and whose summit you likely can’t see. And just like that, all your momentum is gone and you’re left to fulfill your own prophecy of laboring with the gear all the way to the tippy top top of the climb.
To be fair, shifting is a bit of a dark art and takes ages to master. When to shift and when to power through is something one should feel, never see. There is either a laboring or an ease in your stroke that informs whether you should change gear. Please consult the below list for some tips on how to avoid the Anticipation Shift.*
* While these points hold true for any kind of riding, they are focussed on climbing.
** Remember, you can’t boast about climbing in the big ring on a compact; it’s only a big ring if it has more than 50 teeth, in which case it’s an outer ring.
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It very much depends on the hill, sometimes hitting it full gas in the big ring (I now ride a 52 so can officially call it a big ring) and powering all the way to the top works fine, sometimes this results in sudden cessation of forward movement and/or crying, and you're best to get in the inner ring and spin away.
Climbing out of the saddle is something I've worked on and can now do it for a bit longer, although it still feels like a struggle and my instinct is to go high cadence.
It's all relative of course but the devil in me grins when my normal buddy clicks down so I don't but rather I pedal a just a bit harder. Just makes that elastic snap "ping" sound all the nicer.
Click down last click up first.
What is the feeling on downshifting at intersections/stop signs/commuter trail crossings?
I prefer a rather low tempo most of the time, around 80-90. I don't like to be cruising along at that rate, have to stop or slow considerably, and downshift so that I get going and am spinning like crazy. I prefer to stay in the same gear and just stand as I get going again.
What is the protocol in these situations? (and I'm not talking some knee shattering high gear, just something between the low and high ends)
"** Remember, you can’t boast about climbing in the big ring on a compact; it’s only a big ring if it has more than 50 teeth, in which case it’s an outer ring."
So my 52/50 oval ring is only a big ring for half the stroke? Which would mean I could only ever do half a climb "in the big ring"? I think this makes me sad.
@Ron
Don't kill anyone. Including yourself.
@Stephen
There's something about the tooth shape on those old blocks that I find so satisfying.
@RobSandy
I can do that! This time of year though I really, really loathe motorists who refused to turn their lights on in driving rainstorms or when it's essentially dark out.
I have a trick I use to maintain momentum and challenge myself on uphills. When there's a dip and you can wring out the block and make it to tuck before the uphill, decide how many strokes per gear you will take. Ride the big ring and little cog cog as long as possible, when the legs can't hold cadence, shift down one and make 8 (magnificent, of course) strokes. Shift down one and take eight more. Keep doing this until the crest. Next time, try to take 10 strokes in each gear. Soon you'll be pushing over the crest on the 11.
@pistard
We can't call people sissies anymore? I think someone needs the Rule #5 talk.
@Stephen
DeVlaeminck, the king of the corn cob. Brandford Bike has a DeVlaeminck (which is really a Colnago) in the shop and it has one of those as well.
It looks like a 13-18 to me, that 18 is quite a bailout gear, if you ask me. They didn't even develop a 12 (allez la douze) until the late 70's, before that is was 13 or bust.
@Tim Read
This.