greencat":2cg75ulu said:Suspect some (a lot?) of the variation comes down to rider differences and technique.
I went through my first mountain bike's chain and cogs in 6 weeks (200GS) back in the day. My current modern mountain bike's drivetrain (SRAM GX 11spd) has done 1500 miles and counting. I've got an old marin 7spd (it's never out of the middle ring) which must have done close on twice that - often with heavy loads like firewood, trailer etc and beyond the odd dash of oil, near zero maintenance. I reckon I'm a lot kinder to drivetrains now - no standing on the pedals, shifting under load etc. I'll even walk up some steep hills. I also spread the wear around - my best bike is no longer my do it all bike (I have a number of old bikes for shopping etc).
scant":3kft7n24 said:worth a quick read https://www.pinkbike.com/news/4-key-fac ... -test.html
mattr":1xudktu1 said:I've found the best trade off (for me) with durability and availability is a mish mash of shimano 9 speed bits and pieces. Can still get all the cassettes/mechs/chains/shifters from pretty much anywhere on very short notice (though it's generally only chains and cassettes i wear out) decent 8 speed stuff is getting thin on the ground round here, unless you want to trawl eBay and suchlike. 10 speed is still a bit too expensive but no more fragile than 9.
I do have two winter bikes though, a mud one and a snow/ice/salt/shit one. Bet you can guess which one already has 11 speed on it............