Re: OK, i'm putting this out there, i'm likely to get toaste
I like Gripshift and have used it on pretty much every mtb I've built since 1994.
This summer I built an Arthur Caygill, and to prove to those doubters who can be found lurking in the dark crevices ands corners of this very forum, I built it with canti brakes and thumb shifters. I have not ridder Art as much as I should have, but what is noticeable is that thumb shifters just do not work quickly, they really do need a bit of thinking time and if you ask them to react too quickly there is a wailing and a great gnashing of teeth, especially from the front chainrings.
The latest generation of shifters react almost instantly, just like modern technology, but thumb shifters are from a slower, more leisurely time, when gear shifting was not so imperative, gentlemen would doff their caps when passing walkers and when summer lasted from April until the end of September.
I wouldn't say thumbies are crap, just slower than a village idiot after a large Sunday roast.
I like Gripshift and have used it on pretty much every mtb I've built since 1994.
This summer I built an Arthur Caygill, and to prove to those doubters who can be found lurking in the dark crevices ands corners of this very forum, I built it with canti brakes and thumb shifters. I have not ridder Art as much as I should have, but what is noticeable is that thumb shifters just do not work quickly, they really do need a bit of thinking time and if you ask them to react too quickly there is a wailing and a great gnashing of teeth, especially from the front chainrings.
The latest generation of shifters react almost instantly, just like modern technology, but thumb shifters are from a slower, more leisurely time, when gear shifting was not so imperative, gentlemen would doff their caps when passing walkers and when summer lasted from April until the end of September.
I wouldn't say thumbies are crap, just slower than a village idiot after a large Sunday roast.