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POLL: What sort of ...
 

What sort of routing would you prefer your mountain bike to have: Poll created on Mar 11, 2025

  
  
  
  

POLL: What sort of routing would you prefer your mountain bike to have:

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Always been "anything except through the headset", however I'm very interested if anyone has tried these?

https://easybikeparts.co.uk/collections/complete-headsets


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 11:15 am
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got to be internally routed, hoses/cables down the downtube or toptube look a mess.

that said their are differences , my old canyon was a nightmare to internally route, my SC tallboy, its all lagged so took 10 seconds to push the rear brake hose from back to front..

 

not keen on the headset situation


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 4:36 pm
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Not down the underside of the downtube!

I still argue this actually makes the most sense on a hardtail.

The simple logic is that there can't be crud inside the outer cable, if there's no outer cable. I'm not convinced the window in which a full length outer shifts better is actually all that wide.  And when it does deteriorate you just swap that last 200mm loop of outer and wipe some cable-magic on the inner.

 

 

 


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 4:43 pm
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Posted by: reeksy

I have 5 (including my kids' bikes). All a doddle ... apart from one.

A titanium hardtail with ports just about the diameter of brake hose. Even with a magnet tool once you get to the last cable/hose it's a game of *ing *ety *-* and there's tools being hurled around the shed. There's not even space to pull the hose through with fishing line tied to it.

IMG_9690.jpeg

Thanks - that's me triggered!

Worked on one of those 'king things once.  The shop guy booked it in as a standard cable swap so got charged £8 per cable.  Took me most of the bloody day!


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 7:33 pm
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External. Like on my Shand 😍.

Internal is just a total PITA when it comes to doing any repairs.


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 7:58 pm
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Want internal dropper.

Don’t mind internal or external gear

Only want external brake.


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 9:08 pm
leffeboy reacted
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I've got one bike with an internal dropper cable and I see no benefit over my bikes with external dropper routing.  The opposite in fact, since if I want to switch to a normal seatpost if I'm going somewhere with uplift it's dead easy with external routing.

What is the advantage of internal dropper cables?


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 9:41 pm
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Posted by: BruceWee

What is the advantage of internal dropper cables?

It looks neater, generally lower stack height, and most importantly the mechanism is better protected from mud and water.

 


 
Posted : 12/03/2025 10:59 pm
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Posted by: Gribs

It looks neater, generally lower stack height, and most importantly the mechanism is better protected from mud and water.

If those are the advantages I'll just take a lever under the seat.


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 12:19 am
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If those are the advantages I'll just take a lever under the seat.

Wish there was more choice of these for the gravel market, and I can see how they'd still be useful for some MTBs.

Internal dropper routing makes a lot of sense for my MTBs though.


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 11:33 am
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External, all except dropper(mainly because they are mostly internal, and getting an external one limits choices.

 

Brakes should never be internal

Routed the rear hose on the mega, and just needed to grab it using some needle nosed. Damn things slipped nipping off a section of the hose outer.

NOW, im going to have to remove the entire hose length(stupidly cut it exactly to length), and as theres one of those foam tubes inside the frame, buy or find some way of feeding the old hose out, and the new hose connected to it, just so it can fit through the internal foam anti rattle thing.

What an almighty pain in the 4r5e 🤬 

 


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 1:57 pm
 PJay
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Posted by: thisisnotaspoon

Not down the underside of the downtube!

I still argue this actually makes the most sense on a hardtail.

The simple logic is that there can't be crud inside the outer cable, if there's no outer cable. I'm not convinced the window in which a full length outer shifts better is actually all that wide.  And when it does deteriorate you just swap that last 200mm loop of outer and wipe some cable-magic on the inner.

 

Full vs. interrupted outers is perhaps a different poll. I've had both (same routing) & both have been fine.

I just don't get the down the underside of the downtube approach; why put them in harms way on the messiest part of the bike? Stops you heli-taping your down tube too.

On my Swift the cable outer runs straight into my shadow mech.  from the seat stay (shadow mechs were meant to reduce cable loop).

On my Trig with the outer running down the down tube & under the chain stay I need to loop it around & above the mech to the cable entry point at the top .

Under the toptube for me please.


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 3:38 pm
 a11y
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I admit I do like the cleaner look of internal routed but nothing beats external for ease - for brakes anyway. I'd argue internal routing with a fully guided channel is easier than external: simply push the outer cable through whereas with external you'll be securing the cable to the frame via clips or zipties.

Non-guided internal routing can be an utter PITA though.

Deviate's solution with external guided under the toptube is great - easy but also complete out of sight. Slightly falls down where it's then internal through the seatstays though...


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 3:59 pm
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they've both been a doddle to route the cables, I don't understand how cack-handed you'd need to be to struggle

I wish the only issue was doing the routing.

Internal unguided cables rattle. The rattle less when you put foam on them but the rattle eventually. You can do the zip tie thing to prolong how long it takes for them to rattle. But it will eventually.

I wanted to try different brands of brakes, dammit, now I need to bleed when moving them between bikes.

THen there are the entry and exit port designs. Some are good but some are shocking. The exits on my vitus are great if you use the only diameter cable it was made for, otherwise it's clunky.

They look nice, and that is where the benefits of internal routing ends for me.


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 4:14 pm
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I really don’t get this trend for headset cable routing, looks tidy but a ridiculous faff.  I’ll take an easily serviceable bike over a pretty one any day. On road bikes shimano routing the gear cables under the tape is a step too far in my opinion. But that ship has sailed. 


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 9:36 pm
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I ok don’t mind if it’s internal or external as long as it’s done well, you can have your brakes on whichever side you want, they don’t rattle, don’t kink and don't go through the headset. 


 
Posted : 13/03/2025 11:15 pm
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As the question was specifically about MTBs I am firmly in favour of external (but I'd tolerate a bit of internal up the seat tube for a dropper). 

As I do my own spannering and very much value my own time I cannot fathom anyone who would volunteer to disassemble half their bike to change a rear brake through the bastard headset... 

Snip a few zip ties, undo a couple of bolts and brake comes off as a 'loom', new one goes on the same way, WTF would anyone want fully internal routing on an MTB? 

I was listening to the Nero podcast (very roadie focussed) the other day where they were chatting with their local shop mechanic, he commented that the turnover of bikes through the workshop has gone down and the number of hours increased for various jobs, specifically because of internal (through the headset type) routing. Aero, sleek, pain in the ball sack... 


 
Posted : 14/03/2025 11:15 am
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If those are the advantages I'll just take a lever under the seat.

Got one of those on one bike, TBH it's not great from an operability perspective. Other bike has an externally routes cable (to a collar) I only have that because the frame is older and lacks internal routing, most manufacturers of dropper posts seem to be favouring internal, for good or ill it's one area where I'd take it for the sake of broader compatibility, not because it's actually better... 


 
Posted : 14/03/2025 11:34 am
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I still don't understand why anyone would want internal anything but if it has to be inside something I'd rather see manufactures putting the cables under some sort of cover, rather than inside the tubing.  See the Giant Toughroad where they have the cables in a bolt on, mud guard, downtube protector thing.

https://www.giant-bicycles.com/gb/toughroad-slr-2-2022


 
Posted : 14/03/2025 11:36 am
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I still don't understand why anyone would want internal anything but if it has to be inside something I'd rather see manufactures putting the cables under some sort of cover, rather than inside the tubing.  See the Giant Toughroad where they have the cables in a bolt on, mud guard, downtube protector thing.

Just sounds heavy?

Has anyone ever actually damaged roadie / CX style cables under the downtube?

I'm waiting on delivery of one of these and I'll be honest, it's possibly the ugliest cable routing options of all.

The exposed bit just looks a bit messy.  Then the full length outer just doesn't offer much benefit on a road bike.  It's a minor thing but it's one case where I'd have much rather just had traditional cable stops up on the headtube 

www.alpkit.com/cdn/shop/files/colibri-ti-chorus_533faca6-d7b6-4899-82c8-9a5035b3eb79.jpgcolibri-ti-chorus_533faca6-d7b6-4899-82c8-9a5035b3eb79.jpg


 
Posted : 14/03/2025 4:46 pm
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Has anyone ever actually damaged roadie / CX style cables under the downtube?

Nope, it was always fine, better yet if/when the rear shifting went a bit icky, it was a 5min job to squirt some silicone oil under the BB, then pay out a bit of slack in the shifter cable move the outer loop at the rear mech so you could put a bit more silicone oil on the cable/inside the outer and sharpen up the shifting for another 100 miles or so. Also much easier to replace the inner and that last loop of outer at the mech (on a road bike with tape over the outer at the bars) than do a full cable replacement every time. 

Full length outers are great too in their own way, they do keep the shite out for longer, especially if the environment the bike is used in gets horrible, but when they wear out you do basically need to replace the whole run, putting it inside the frame adds slightly more faff, putting it through a headset? Half Intended to persuade you that leccy shifting is what you want (which TBF it probably is)... 

I've still got sectional outers on my road and Gravel bikes, I considered drilling out the stops, but the maintenance advantage and shifting actually outweigh the sealing improvement. Different on my MTBs though, full length outer makes sense there as there's more gritty/dirty water to contend with and no need to re-wrap a bar just to change a cable outer. 

It's all swings and roundabouts, and it only really matters to people who work on their own bikes rather than just accept the hourly rates of a professional, but I'll be striving to keep cabling and brake hoses on the outside of my frames for a good long while yet... 


 
Posted : 16/03/2025 11:59 am
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I'm longing for the days of no cables anywhere


 
Posted : 16/03/2025 1:15 pm
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Posted by: PJay

Under the toptube for me please.

That gets in the way of shouldering your bike and also fitting frame bags. External cables are a PITA for any sort of bikepacking / on-bike storage.

Posted by: cookeaa

I was listening to the Nero podcast (very roadie focussed) the other day where they were chatting with their local shop mechanic, he commented that the turnover of bikes through the workshop has gone down and the number of hours increased for various jobs, specifically because of internal (through the headset type) routing.

My LBS had similar viewpoints early on (and to be fair, some of the early attempts at internal routing, road and MTB were terrible) but generally, most are now fairly sorted and, because he gets to see a multitude of bikes every day, he's very used to the various routing choices, how different brands have done it and he kind of knows now how long any job should take. 

Posted by: gordimhor

I'm longing for the days of no cables anywhere

Yep! I specifically bought the next model up for my commuter bike to get the wireless shifting. No way did I want to be messing around with trying to internally route a gear cable through an e-bike frame, past the motor and the battery. The only internal thing on it is the rear brake hose and - fingers crossed - that should never need to come out, just needs a re-bleed every year or so. Whatever routing they've used, there's no discernible rattle.


 
Posted : 16/03/2025 1:46 pm
 PJay
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I don't think that any type of routing is going to work for everyone/every bike.

Posted by: crazy-legs

External cables are a PITA for any sort of bikepacking / on-bike storage.

An yet plenty of bikepacking/touring bikes have external routing.

Just a thought (I don't bikepack or tour) but both my bikes have modular, bolt on cable guides. Would it be possible to come up with some sort of combined cable guide with integrated luggage mount/strapping point? I might just be being fanciful.


 
Posted : 16/03/2025 2:51 pm
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Posted by: BruceWee

The opposite in fact, since if I want to switch to a normal seatpost if I'm going somewhere with uplift it's dead easy with external routing.

Why would you want to switch to a normal seat post?

Re: seat posts - loving the cable less AXS where I can actually move the post up and down in the frame without worrying about cable tension screwing things up

Posted by: zerocool

I ok don’t mind if it’s internal or external as long as it’s done well, you can have your brakes on whichever side you want, they don’t rattle, don’t kink and don't go through the headset.

 

I'm massively annoyed with my new Spesh. I like internal routing (not headset), but for some reason they are shipping UK bikes with Euro/US brake set ups. Swap them over (mine came swapped) and the rear brake enters the downtube on the left. It's an abomination. The last Spesh I bought in 2019 wasn't like this. Horrific, but I'm not going through the pain of changing it

 


 
Posted : 17/03/2025 10:16 pm
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Posted by: TheArtistFormerlyKnownAsSTR

Why would you want to switch to a normal seat post?

Because a dropper does nothing when I've got a chairlift to take me to the top of the hill.  Also, I'm going faster so the crashes are harder when they happen.  I've broken two seatposts over the years (or rather, broken two saddles and made a real mess of the seatpost clamps) and I'd rather knacker a £20 seatpost than a £200 seatpost that serves no purpose.

Also, I'm sure there aren't any places that hang the bike off the back of the cabin by the seatpost any more but doing a day at Fort William and sitting there on the way up the hill wondering just how strong my Crank Brothers Joplin was when in tension means that removing the dropper is just what I do now if the bike is going to spend the day anywhere near a cable car.

 


 
Posted : 18/03/2025 1:47 pm
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External cables are a PITA for any sort of bikepacking / on-bike storage.

What even under the down tube?

I'll accept nothing is ever ideal but even if you're lashing a full frame bag on that can work with under the Down tube routed cables surely?

Lines can go either side of any underside bottle bosses too so you don't lose that option, for me it's the least functionally compromised routing option that keeps a bike more generally maintainable. 


 
Posted : 18/03/2025 1:52 pm
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Actually thinking about it, in my new roadie-audax bike purchase I've been quite snobby about cable routing, despite generally being a 'don't care'.

Fairlight Strael - I didn't like the cable stops on an expensive bike that at some point I would probably Di2.

Sonder Colibri - As I said, the full length internal routing actually looks messier than cable stops.

Mason Resolution - similar tot he sonder, but neater because the cable entry port is on top of the tube so the run form the bar is shorter and a nicer curve. Possibly the neatest option all round that isn't through the headset.

Brother Stroma - Probably my preferred setup for mechanical shifting (external exposed cables and the brake run between them) although as below, that is the one option that precludes a full frame bag (not really something I'd use on the road anyway).

I went with the Colibri because Alpkit offered a far better value build option and didn't charge for C2W. And if I do go Di2 I can 3D print some cable stops.  I'm crossing my fingers it's less messy in reality 😂.  Did cable routing influence my decision, yes.  Did I end up ignoring my thoughts on the matter as just about everything else was more important, more yes. 

What even under the down tube?

There's a minor issue with how you run straps around them. 

It's minor though.  Full length cables you just cuck the strap under them, exposed cables it also goes under them, there's not enough friction /deflection to affect shifting (unless you have some massively chunky straps or something?) .

I've bikepacked on my CX bike and it worked well, the bake runs on top and slightly to one side of the toptube.

I still think there's just something 'right' about modern road bikes with internal routing.  Makes them look like track bikes.  And if/when the upper headset fails, chuck a posh one in and that'll probably be the first and last time you ever have to take it apart. 

 

 

 

 


 
Posted : 19/03/2025 11:30 am
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Transition do external rear brake internal everything else. For me this would be the sweet spot!

 


 
Posted : 23/03/2025 4:05 pm
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I admire the ingenuity of that brakeless solution. A true hack.


 
Posted : 24/03/2025 1:07 am
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