- Feedback
- View
ok, follow my logic here.
mountain bikes traditionally have had 3 chainrings up front, 7, 8, 9, 10 sprockets at the back.
assuming you bought a new bike in the last say 2 ish years it would have had 18, 20, 27 or 30 gears on it, these gears would have let you ride most things
then you picked up a magazine, probably singletrack or mbuk, they told you your bike was heavy, it needed streamlining.
remove your front mech and shifter and 1 or 2 chainrings . . . . it's better, it's smoother, it's lighter . . . . and it's cooler
you'll need to buy a narrow wide chainring though as chain devices are so last year
hmm . . . go out for a ride, god i miss my inside ring, i can't climb that steep hill anymore
don't worry we have an extra big cassette replacement sprocket for you, a 40/42, you can climb anything with that.
hmm . . . but now my rear shifting sucks
don't worry we have a "rad cage" for your rear mech, this means your mech can now cope with the massive sprocket you just put on.
so to recap,
you have gears that work, you took them off, you then bought a specific chainring and paid alot for it, you then bought an extra single sprocket and paid a fortune for it, it then didn't work great so you bought an extra bit to make it work.
now correct me if i'm wrong but isn't that really dumb? (or really clever of the design/marketing guys?)
:facepalm:
mountain bikes traditionally have had 3 chainrings up front, 7, 8, 9, 10 sprockets at the back.
assuming you bought a new bike in the last say 2 ish years it would have had 18, 20, 27 or 30 gears on it, these gears would have let you ride most things
then you picked up a magazine, probably singletrack or mbuk, they told you your bike was heavy, it needed streamlining.
remove your front mech and shifter and 1 or 2 chainrings . . . . it's better, it's smoother, it's lighter . . . . and it's cooler
you'll need to buy a narrow wide chainring though as chain devices are so last year
hmm . . . go out for a ride, god i miss my inside ring, i can't climb that steep hill anymore
don't worry we have an extra big cassette replacement sprocket for you, a 40/42, you can climb anything with that.
hmm . . . but now my rear shifting sucks
don't worry we have a "rad cage" for your rear mech, this means your mech can now cope with the massive sprocket you just put on.
so to recap,
you have gears that work, you took them off, you then bought a specific chainring and paid alot for it, you then bought an extra single sprocket and paid a fortune for it, it then didn't work great so you bought an extra bit to make it work.
now correct me if i'm wrong but isn't that really dumb? (or really clever of the design/marketing guys?)
:facepalm: