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[Closed] A SSers opinion on derailleurs.

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Thols2 understands properly how rear mechs work - saved me some typing 🙂

And if you watch a muddy cross race, you'll understand how a lot of rear mech failures occur. It isn't from impact - it is from something in the system getting sticky or jammed and then dragging the mech. So that can be all kinds of things:
Stuck freewheeL
Seized or jammed jockey
Twig
Tight chain link
Bulging open chain link
Chain suck / sticking to the underside of the front ring

I'm commuting 7 miles each way on Alfine. That will change to 20 miles with a house move in summer. Just starting on a new commuter frame which will probably keep the Alf (although I do have a totally inappropriate desire to make a single sided / righty Gates ss frame).

Have a disc mount 135 Sturmey in the attic - weight and efficiency are OK, just a weak axle and non existent sealing stops it getting more use. I did swap some emails with Alan at Sunrace 10yrs ago, but he could never see there being a market for mtb 3 spd.

Love ss and need to go back for mtb duties sometime. I've got two drawbacks - slow and cold on long flat / roadrunner sections. And it used to work great riding with the kids, but now eldest is proper u23 xc race fast, I get left behind EVERYWHERE unless the terrain is just right.

Just out to play in the snow so pray for my mech...


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 10:50 am
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@jameso I looked into something similar but at the time couldn't find a sprung front tensioner that would accommodate the double chainring width.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 10:52 am
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I never had any of those issues with my alfine. I think much of the issues people get with alfines are due to lack of maintenance.

No problems with high torque - I ran mine at the puffer on stupidly low gearing with no issues


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 10:54 am
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(anyone done this and found a good BB mount tension method?)

Tried a few and not found one I like.
I think the two jockey wheel rear tensioners are a better solution - Rohloff, Paul's, Alfine are the 3 I can think of.

I never had any of those issues with my alfine. I think much of the issues people get with alfines are due to lack of maintenance.

No problems with high torque – I ran mine at the puffer on stupidly low gearing with no issues

I ran mine with a 30 front and 22 rear. Way outside the recommended gearing.

Gave it an oil dip once a year, and it ran fine.
It did eventually die catastrophically, but it gave good service while it was alive!
Considering I bought it for £100 second hand and ran it for 5-6 years I was happy.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 10:54 am
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I think the two jockey wheel rear tensioners are a better solution – Rohloff, Paul’s, Alfine are the 3 I can think of.

They would be better/easier, I suppose visually I'm after a clean rear wheel and dropout area and moving the mechanicals to the chainset. A bit like a 30s Bianchi.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:07 am
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I think my puffer gearing was 26 front and 22 rear. Might have been lower.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:08 am
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Also don’t forget running costs are virtually zero with an IGH

I think much of the issues people get with alfines are due to lack of maintenance.

So, are they low maintenance or high maintenance? 🙂


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:15 am
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I think my puffer gearing was 26 front and 22 rear. Might have been lower.

😲 Impressively low!

So, are they low maintenance or high maintenance?

If you're happy taking out the internals once a year to dip in oil, then I'd say low maintenance.
Some people wouldn't like it though. Involves cone spanners and ball bearings.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:16 am
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Low maintenance - annual dip in atf. Takes about 20 mins plus a while sitting in the bath 🙂
Edit - a single cheap chainring and a single cheap rear sprocket - and they last much much longer. I also like the silent running.
I also have a rohloff and a SA 3spd

MY puffer gearing effectively worked out similar to a 9 spd 2x setup but only the granny ring ratios. span out about 12 mph


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:18 am
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jameso
anyone done this and found a good BB mount tension method? I have a fiver on @epicyclo having done it

You're right.

About 22 years ago. The BB mount tensioners were enjoying some popularity amongst the DH crowd in my area and I saw it as a possible solution to tensioning a SS chain on an MTB frame with vertical dropouts. (For some reason they weren't making MTB frames with proper dropouts back then 🙂 )

The drawback I found was that I could make it slip out of adjustment under pressure. I didn't persevere with it because a frame with proper dropouts came on the market so I imported that (thanks to Surly for the 1x1, still riding it).

I reckon it would work better if the tensioner had a spring mount. Alternatively a bike frame the ISG mounts on the BB shell rather than rely on the clamping action of the BB against the shell.

My solution was Magic Ratio. It works pretty well, all you need is three cogs, one on each side of your ideal. Even better if you want to fine tune is a couple of chainrings, eg 33 and 32. That way, you'll find a combo that works and isn't too tight or too slack. I use steel chainrings to avoid wear. A properly set up SS chain can tolerate a lot of slack so wear isn't a problem (especially with steel rings).

Always remembering, it's not worth obsessing about getting the perfect ratio in SS, close enough is good enough. We're in the wrong gear 90% of the time anyway. 🙂


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:20 am
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I've also got a Nuvunci hub that I've experimented with on my Krampus.

460% gearing, continuously variable gearing via a twist grip.
It's a great concept, but...
a) very heavy.
b) very draggy in the lower gears.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 11:21 am
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My fiver was safe : )

I reckon it would work better if the tensioner had a spring mount.

That's it, something like the Yess tensioner I found with a mod so the roller/JW could slide to account for 2 rings with a 10-12T gap. Might be a DIY job for the new year, got a load of old DH BB mount stuff that may help. The 2 rings + FD with SS rear idea appeals and could make a nice bike.

30s bianchi


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 12:18 pm
 Del
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my eyes!

Tom - spare alfine hub sitting in my garage with all the kit doing nothing. open to offers... 😉

weight in the wrong place for MTB IMO.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 1:23 pm
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So just like all normal gears have their weight in the wrong place then?
https://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/stu-mcgroos-lets-put-this-alfine-weight-issue-to-bed-once-and-for-all-thread/


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 1:31 pm
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@Del
I'm running out of bikes an Alfine will fit on.
Of the bikes I'd want it on only the Krampus doesn't have a thru axle.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 3:20 pm
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epicyclo you originally said

Derailleurs ... hang where they get a continuous spray of grinding compound aka mud, so drivetrains are regarded as consumables these days.

Implying that your non derailleur bikes don't hence my previous comment.

I ran mine at the puffer on stupidly low gearing with no issues

Not meant at all personally tj but there are no climbs there that are even remotely steep, so I can't see that as high torque for the hub.

Otherwise I quite like the idea of fewer gears with bigger jumps, so many benefits, and unless you are racing you don't need to be in the perfect gear IMO.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 6:26 pm
 LAT
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@jameso ah, using a 2x!

how would you feel about the return of the hammerschmidt or something similar?

this always seemed like a good idea. would be good with smaller cassettes and wider flanges.


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 7:37 pm
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I found the chainstay mounted Suntour mech that removes a bit of the clutter behind the axle. Even has the indexing in the mech not lever.

http://www.disraeligears.co.uk/Site/SunTour_S-1_derailleur_S100.html

Alfines don't shift under load, but they do keep going in your existing gear without complaining (the shift just happens once unloaded).


 
Posted : 31/12/2020 7:37 pm
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@mick_r
Interesting website. This page says that Shimano started out making derailleurs then switched to hub gears, then went back to derailleurs to increase the range of the hub gears, then started selling derailleurs as a stand alone product. It was the Tourney that conquered the world, introduced in 1967 as the Skylark.

http://www.disraeligears.co.uk/Site/Shimano_derailleurs.html


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 4:02 am
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Not meant at all personally tj but there are no climbs there that are even remotely steep, so I can’t see that as high torque for the hub.

its the overall gearing you run that effects the torque thru the hub - not the steepness of the climbs


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 9:05 am
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far too exposed for UK mtb conditions unless you stick to the manmade mtb trails.

This is just click-bait crap, and you know it. if you want to have a discussion about gears, go for it, but like Daffy in 30 years + of riding everywhere, from the alps to Moab, from the Chilterns to Calderdale and Scotland I've never bust a mech, so I guess any issues you have with them is user failure.

I do I usually pass one poor soul every lap with a busted derailleur

Anecdote is not evidence.

Derailleurs are a well perfected mechanism for efficiency, so I don’t see them replaced by an alternative system

Rohloff have been doing nothing but trying to develop a hub gear for 25 years now, it's still too heavy, too complex and not user serviceable. It's totally unfit for purpose. If hub gears, like other forms of front suspension were going to replace what's there already, it would've happened. It hasn't because:  Le mieux est l'enemi de bien (as Voltaire probably didn't say)

but they hang where they get a continuous spray of grinding compound aka mud, so drive-trains are regarded as consumables these days.

Everything from the chain to any gear system you put on the back of a bike is going to get covered in spray...(correlation is not causation)

The manufacturers benefit from their systems being consumable, so there’s no motivation to change to something more durable.

That's because derailleurs are durable, I've never bought a mech. to replace a broken one, and that's the experience of most folk. That you ride with folk who've broken them is conformation bias, there are millions; literally millions of mechs in the world being perfectly happy

What improvements to the derailleur can STW come up with?

Teaching people how to ride? your issues with them are clearly user based..You trot out your personal ennui every few months Come up with something else to grumble about, (old men, sky, shouting etc etc)


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 9:24 am
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Rohloff have been doing nothing but trying to develop a hub gear for 25 years now, it’s still too heavy, too complex and not user serviceable.

If you browse about that website that mick_r linked to, it says that Shimano started out making derailleurs then introduced hub gears (for commuter bikes) and stopped making derailleurs. Then they started making derailleurs again and dominated the market because they made an affordable, reliable derailleur for touring and commuter bikes. This goes back far before Rohloff, and hub gears have long had a solid niche market, but derailleurs are simple and cheap to manufacture and are good enough for most people. I've bent a couple of derailleur hangers and destroyed one derailleur in 20 years. It's so infrequent that it's not a big problem.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 9:37 am
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I'll not be buying a Rohloff, but the "not user serviceable / unfit for purpose" is stretching things a bit far. Do you do much servicing of your car gearbox? I used to have a fun leg-pull with an old engineer at work who was a Sherpa van fan whilst I ran fwd Citroën vans:
Q "How do you easily reshim the differential on your fwd French cr@p?"

A "In hundreds of thousands of miles the diffs have never needed reshimming...."

Ironically he now owns a VW T5, one of the fwd vans most prone to diff / driveshaft issues 🙂


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 12:15 pm
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How about a non-epicyclic hub gear? Pear shaped flanges with multiple spoke lengths would be fun.....

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Posted : 01/01/2021 12:26 pm
 hugo
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I’d like to see more development of a 5 to 7 speed systems, IGH or derailleur. Wide-ish ratio, bigger jumps accepted. Chain durability and general tolerances increased. Longer wear rates.

I wholeheartedly agree. The whole "progression" being based on number of gears causes compromises elsewhere.

It's a bit like all new cars having to having to have 24 valves or 7 seats just because they can.

There's a definite need for a rock solid and quality 7 speed system. I'd even like to see a modern version of a 3 speed wide range hub gear.

We've already got rid of 3x and 2x is going....

PS. I like gears!

PPS. A big issue with having bombproof derailleurs is that when they get a clang the frame can end up taking the brunt of it...


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 1:02 pm
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but the “not user serviceable / unfit for purpose” is stretching things a bit far.

Rohloff insist on servicing their hubs*, there are no user serviceable parts and going through hub deep water is "extreme conditions" as per their warranty...SFB, (recently departed of this forum) had to send a hub back to Germany twice after some river crossings in the Lake district. They admitted to him that it wasn't sealed well enough not to ship water and fail. For an apparently off-road suitable product that for me falls into "unfit for purpose". My derailleur has never failed to work because it's got wet...

* and you need to ship it there at your own cost...Good luck with that now we're out of the EU.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 1:14 pm
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While everyone here is waiving their penis around telling each other they are wrong, I'd just like more choice.

I don't care if rear mechs are prone to smashing or hubs feel like riding through treacle, I'd just like a bit more variety and choice when it comes to the bit between pedals and rear wheel.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 1:48 pm
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its the overall gearing you run that effects the torque thru the hub – not the steepness of the climbs

It's both and also how much W you put through the hub.

I still dont see the Puffer as a reliable test.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 1:54 pm
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I’d just like a bit more variety and choice when it comes to the bit between pedals and rear wheel.

Basically this.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 2:09 pm
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The whole “progression” being based on number of gears causes compromises elsewhere.

All engineering involves compromises. A 7 speed cassette cannot have the range of a 12 speed without having much larger gaps between the ratios, so engineers have to decide which compromise is better. A 3x7 system would allow a stronger rear wheel and give good range with small gaps between ratios, but having a front derailleur is a compromise. 29" wheels have benefits over 26" wheels, but they are difficult to package with a front derailleur, so 1x12 provides a better gear range than 1x7 would without needing huge gaps between ratios. Any choices you make like this involve compromises, with cost being a major one. There's no point making the best system in the world if nobody can afford it.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 2:18 pm
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A light-ish 3 speed hub would be lovely please.

A 7 speed cassette cannot have the range of a 12 speed without having much larger gaps between the ratios

For a lot of people that'd be ok, I reckon. Maybe even 5 speed would be ok. Like, if I've got gears on my bike I'll tend to leave it (10sp) in 7th which in my case is a singlespeedy sort of gear and maybe wiffle up or down a gear depending on what the road or path's doing or I'll just dump it right down to the bottom gear if I'm knackered (or get off and push!)


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 3:15 pm
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There’s a definite need for a rock solid and quality 7 speed system.

Really? Surely 11sp is rock solid and quality?


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 3:28 pm
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Based on only my experience, a nice 5-7 speed would suit ebikes. Think the last one I borrowed I only used 3.


 
Posted : 01/01/2021 8:25 pm
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@Jameso I used that Jones mod for years, originally with an XT 34t cassette and an old Shimano 600 derailleur then found Sunrise do a wide range 8sp cassette which when split and replaced, gives you 13-34 or 15-40. The cogs are even 10sp width, so could probably be spaced 7 at 10sp spacing.
I've recently gotten a modern bike with SX and I'm seriously unimpressed with it, which may be me, mud or general wintryness.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 10:08 am
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Really? Surely 11sp is rock solid and quality?

And 12 sp. to be fair, mines be totally reliable (as was the 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 speed that proceeded it)


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 10:41 am
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Sunrise do a wide range 8sp cassette which when split and replaced, gives you 13-34 or 15-40.

Useful to know, thanks - have specced some of these but not got hold of any to try on my own bike.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 10:58 am
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Based on only my experience, a nice 5-7 speed would suit ebikes

Isn't this why we get e-bike groupsets now? Aren't they 7 speed?

Hmm, looks like e-mtb stuff is still 11 or even 12 speed, although I swore there were newer 7 speed options around. My mum's urban e-bike type thing is 7 speed.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 11:17 am
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SRAM made an 8s E-bike group. It had some good ideas in it like limiting the shifts to one sprocket at a time, which makes sense over wider gearing gaps. Selling mass-market bikes with fewer gears rarely works out well though.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 11:30 am
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I wonder how many of the folk saying rohloffs and other IGH are not fit for purpose have actually ridden them much?


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 11:46 am
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A bit like a single-speeder criticising derailleurs 😉


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 11:48 am
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I wonder how many of the folk saying rohloffs and other IGH are not fit for purpose have actually ridden them much?

I've seen the price tag. If I won the lottery, I'd buy one. Just too expensive to even consider for most people.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 12:31 pm
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Used to ride nothing but single speeds. Haven’t ridden one with any regularity for several years now since developing knee problems (though it’s getting dusted off tomorrow). Rode the first 5 Strathpuffers SS as it makes sense - no real climbs, and the unpredictable conditions mean that a simple bike makes sense.

Have never had a problem with a derailleur. Calls to abandon them seem to be based on experience of old mechs pre clutch and ore wide range 1x. 12spd Shimano stuff is almost faultless and has a far better weight distribution than a hub gear, and better ergonomics and function. Used a few hub gear options inc Rohloff and dislike them. Sluggish and very unrefined. Derailleurs for me win by a mile.

Different people have different priorities and preferences, which is why there are still options like Rohloff/Alfine etc but to me they make most sense on Urban bikes (where 8 use mine). On an MTB a good derailleur set up can’t be beaten right now as far as I can see.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 12:48 pm
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You can add my name to the list for a simple offroad 3 speed IG hub

Better still, somebody copy the Schlumpf drive and make it enduro tough and half the price


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 1:25 pm
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I wonder how many of the folk saying rohloffs and other IGH are not fit for purpose have actually ridden them much?

I had one on my Pompetamine, Alfine 11spd, which was my commuter/tourer. I wanted to like it but I suspect that:

a) 11spd was pushing that design/technology
b) I got one that was right on the QA limit.

It did seem very sensitive to dirt on the arm that the gear cable ran over so it needed regular cleaning and adjusting, much more so than a derailleur cable. I wasn't riding in particularly dirty conditions either - well drained canal towpaths were about the limit.

Ultimately it broke and I only had three gears which is why I then converted that bike to SS. I've not tried the 8spd version or the Rohloff (other than five minutes playing on a mate's bike that was fitted with one) so can't comment on those.

Ultimately nothing's perfect so it's just choosing what compromises you want to make.

Yeah, a MTB oriented Sturmey Archer hub gear would be pretty good. Pick your chainring:cog pairing for the central ratio then something like 50% and 133% for the other two.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 1:29 pm
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I don't understand why everybody wants hub gears. As the axle has to go through the hub and it runs on bearings so there can't be a good seal to the body otherwise there's too much drag. Any accumulated water will be drawn into the hub and the gears inside. It's the failure point of every geared hub.

As thols2 points out up there. You're just swapping one design compromise for another.


 
Posted : 02/01/2021 1:50 pm
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