FluffyChicken":321w22jm said:The conventional spring, called a torsion spring. Was common to all of that era.
The helical spring that replaced it was also a 'filter up' from the XT groupset a year before. (m737).
For anyone who cares, the high/low limit screw area had also altered shape.
I believe this spring modification was brought about to make sure GripShift had a hard time working correctly
P.S. The M900 in that picture seems to have a Titanium Pivot bolt. That's not standard for any M9x0 rear mech.
FluffyChicken":pjfuxtfr said:Look what I called the coil spring originally. Brain freeze at the time and I only got the torsion part form the docs. I couldn't remember the name of them either.
I never had the 737 or m910 at the time (my trust 900 worked fine) so never used them with gripshift. But it was added for 'LightAction' with the new improved shifters of 737/910 and everything to follow.
But people on here and vague memories prompted by that, say that they didn't go too well. I think the rear mech didn't pull hard enough on the cable on the return stroke (to lower cogs) to pull the cable properly through the shifter (it's a direct route through the RF+'s, GripShift are coiled and go through a bend so more friction). Sram BassWorms (not its only job) and 'improved rear mech springs' then became aftermarket.
FluffyChicken":17foi804 said:The conventional spring, called a torsion spring. Was common to all of that era.
The helical spring that replaced it was also a 'filter up' from the XT groupset a year before. (m737).
For anyone who cares, the high/low limit screw area had also altered shape.
P.S. The M900 in that picture seems to have a Titanium Pivot bolt. That's not standard for any M9x0 rear mech.
FluffyChicken":1i2okbld said:Get that website up and running fully again, makes it much easier to just point there and pinch pictures