Rishi@Cruzbike
Active Member
hmmm.... MTB shifters of Dropbars?
The more I read about the gearing of my groupset, the more I'm regretting it San Marcos CA, is quite hilly and I really should have thought it thru better.
I am considering getting the SRAM 12 speed 10-50 with a 42t chainring (if something like this combination exists).
Sigh..... I'll go over to the Trek store near me and see what they can do. I should be able to return the DI2.
I really appreciate all the great information and the experiences being shared here.
Wow! Am I understanding this thread correctly? I can use an 11-40T cassette with Di2 just by using a Roadlink? Currently running 30/46 and 11/32, but finding 9% grades taxing.
Wow! Am I understanding this thread correctly? I can use an 11-40T cassette with Di2 just by using a Roadlink? Currently running 30/46 and 11/32, but finding 9% grades taxing.
New question
Does the DI2 software need to be fooled into working with, Roadlink modded, 11-40T and R8050 RD for Syncro Shift?
Hmmm..... 34-50T and 11-40T produces the gear ratios below. I see a good way to use Full or Semi Syncro Shift.
View attachment 7775
Be aware the Ultegra medium cage doesn’t have enough capacity to handle little-little (and probably up to little-medium). You probably want the chain long enough to handle big-big unless you can explicitly block that combo (or are very diligent about never shifting there, with penalty being you tear your derailleur off if you forget).
Be aware the Ultegra medium cage doesn’t have enough capacity to handle little-little (and probably up to little-medium). You probably want the chain long enough to handle big-big unless you can explicitly block that combo (or are very diligent about never shifting there, with penalty being you tear your derailleur off if you forget).
I've read that. I'm not good at remembering what gearing I'm at, and by using the R8050 GS + Roadlink DM + Shimano XT M8000 11-40T + Full Syncro + Garmin device to see my gearing, I'm hoping to stop just that from happening. Being in the wrong gear takes a lot of the the fun out of bicycling for me.
2 ways:
1) they allow you to keep your knee-bend on the upstroke at, near, or maybe even more open than 90 degrees, which is better on your knees in terms of pain and wear and tear
2) they help you get the thigh and knee clearance to the handle bars that you need, while allowing you to keep your arms reasonably extended. every cm you shorten your cranks allows you to have your bottom bracket a cm further from your bars at maximum leg extension while still having your reach to the pedal where you like it; and every cm you shorten your cranks means a cm of extra thigh/knee clearance on the upstroke. this is additive: 1 cm shorter cranks effectively gives you 2cm of extra bar clearance, without losing power. (there are studies to show that shorter cranks--within limits-- don't decrease your power even though the 'lever' is shorter)
(the opposite of shortening your cranks is also true when it comes to bar clearance: for every 1cm longer your cranks are, you lose 2cm of bar clearance)
In addition, if you spin faster you will wobble less by having less pressure on the front wheel. The shorter crank arms have less leverage and thus you will want to spin more. The other advantage of the faster spinning is that it's easier on your heart as well, as each stroke is less effort. You'll be able to climb hills with less effort. (It's still not free though!)
The frames can take any weight, but the wheels AND tyres cannot!I don't see any information on what the max bike+rider+gear weight capacities for the CB bikes are. I'd like to know for the S40 and T50. Planing on making an electric T50 too