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#1 |
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WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY
UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php...2008/news/06-04 (Seriously, though, it can't be true, right? Nothing they put into production hasn't first been tested thru the pro ranks for a while, no? Didn't the first ten speeds appear in the pro peloton a few months before they were introduced for consumers, or am I misremembering that?) |
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#2 |
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shayana.kadidal@gmail.com wrote:
> WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY > UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! Old news: I brought it 17/05/08 to this newsgroup already: "New Campa Record and Chorus 11 speed" Derk |
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#3 |
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<shayana.kadidal@gmail.com> wrote in message news:ca1165c1-9f92-4841-9a0d-371e6373fcb1@x19g2000prg.googlegroups.com... > WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY > UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! > > http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php...2008/news/06-04 > > (Seriously, though, it can't be true, right? Nothing they put into > production hasn't first been tested thru the pro ranks for a while, > no? Didn't the first ten speeds appear in the pro peloton a few months > before they were introduced for consumers, or am I misremembering > that?) Spinal Tap "These got to 11" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhVWJgIzftE Inferior manmeat image.... 8-) Chas. |
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#4 |
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On Jun 5, 1:40*pm, Werehatrack <raul...@earthWEEDSlink.net> wrote:
> On Wed, 4 Jun 2008 22:40:42 -0700 (PDT), shayana.kadi...@gmail.com may > have said: > > >WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY > >UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! > > >http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php...2008/news/06-04 > > >(Seriously, though, it can't be true, right? Nothing they put into > >production hasn't first been tested thru the pro ranks for a while, > >no? Didn't the first ten speeds appear in the pro peloton a few months > >before they were introduced for consumers, or am I misremembering > >that?) > > Beyond a certain point, it's all pretty much of a "why bother" issue, > at least to me. *I seldom use all of the gear combinations I have now; > more of them won't make me faster, or more stylish, or younger, or > better looking, or richer (quite the opposite), or wittier, or more > famous. * > > So Campy announced an 11s cassette setup. *There comes a point at > which the absurdity factor has to kick in; while I have no doubt that > there will be riders who will embrace the new toy with what Campy's > marketing people feel is the appropriate degree of reverence, I have > little doubt that there will be more than a few riders who will look > at it and say "I have enough now, I don't need to spend the money for > this." > > Some products are introduced into a demand vacuum. *I can't say that > such is the case here, but the air's certainly getting mighty rarefied > at these altitudes. > > -- > My email address is antispammed; pull WEEDS if replying via e-mail. > Typoes are not a bug, they're a feature. > Words processed in a facility that contains nuts. ====================================================================== ==== I agree that there comes a point where you say "why bother and what's the point." I wonder how the spokes are going to hold up or are they going to increase the spacing between the dropouts again? What about the chain-line? How many of these 11 gears in the rear can you actually use without cross-chaining? It seems to me that you really do not get either higher or lower gearing with more cogs just smaller jumps between cogs. Are we eventually going to see corncob clusters of from 11 teeth to 26 teeth in one-tooth increments? I mean with 11 cogs and a high of 11 teeth you can have a corncob cluster to 21 teeth. I can remember reading articles in Bicycling magazine (from the 70's iirc) that stated emphatically that 15 gears were not needed. Peter |
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#5 |
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On Wed, 4 Jun 2008 22:40:42 -0700 (PDT), shayana.kadidal@gmail.com may
have said: >WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY >UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! > >http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php...2008/news/06-04 > >(Seriously, though, it can't be true, right? Nothing they put into >production hasn't first been tested thru the pro ranks for a while, >no? Didn't the first ten speeds appear in the pro peloton a few months >before they were introduced for consumers, or am I misremembering >that?) Beyond a certain point, it's all pretty much of a "why bother" issue, at least to me. I seldom use all of the gear combinations I have now; more of them won't make me faster, or more stylish, or younger, or better looking, or richer (quite the opposite), or wittier, or more famous. So Campy announced an 11s cassette setup. There comes a point at which the absurdity factor has to kick in; while I have no doubt that there will be riders who will embrace the new toy with what Campy's marketing people feel is the appropriate degree of reverence, I have little doubt that there will be more than a few riders who will look at it and say "I have enough now, I don't need to spend the money for this." Some products are introduced into a demand vacuum. I can't say that such is the case here, but the air's certainly getting mighty rarefied at these altitudes. -- My email address is antispammed; pull WEEDS if replying via e-mail. Typoes are not a bug, they're a feature. Words processed in a facility that contains nuts. |
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#6 |
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On Thu, 05 Jun 2008 11:40:21 -0600, Werehatrack
<rault00@earthWEEDSlink.net> wrote: >Beyond a certain point, it's all pretty much of a "why bother" issue, >at least to me. Yeah. But for me we haven't reached that poing with ten cogs. Ten suits me for 98% of the riding I do each year. Eleven would take it to almost 100%. Twelve would be a little nicer even. Thirteen would have zero value. |
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#7 |
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On Thu, 5 Jun 2008 10:03:42 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot
<i_am_cycle_pathic@yahoo.ca> wrote: >11 teeth to 26 >teeth in one-tooth increments? For me, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 28 would be desirable. Closer than that would have no value. |
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#8 |
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Werehatrack wrote:
> > Beyond a certain point, it's all pretty much of a "why bother" issue, > at least to me. * > That was back around the 8-speed era. > I have > little doubt that there will be more than a few riders who will look > at it and say "I have enough now, I don't need to spend the money for > this." > Until their current stuff breaks and can't be replaced. That's the problem. Art Harris |
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#9 |
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> shayana.kadidal@gmail.com may have said:
>> WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY >> UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! >> >> http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php...2008/news/06-04 >> >> (Seriously, though, it can't be true, right? Nothing they put into >> production hasn't first been tested thru the pro ranks for a while, >> no? Didn't the first ten speeds appear in the pro peloton a few months >> before they were introduced for consumers, or am I misremembering >> that?) Werehatrack wrote: > Beyond a certain point, it's all pretty much of a "why bother" issue, > at least to me. I seldom use all of the gear combinations I have now; > more of them won't make me faster, or more stylish, or younger, or > better looking, or richer (quite the opposite), or wittier, or more > famous. > > So Campy announced an 11s cassette setup. There comes a point at > which the absurdity factor has to kick in; while I have no doubt that > there will be riders who will embrace the new toy with what Campy's > marketing people feel is the appropriate degree of reverence, I have > little doubt that there will be more than a few riders who will look > at it and say "I have enough now, I don't need to spend the money for > this." > > Some products are introduced into a demand vacuum. I can't say that > such is the case here, but the air's certainly getting mighty rarefied > at these altitudes. I would have written something like that ('Eleven? feh') but, as I read yours, I realized that Campagnolo has now 'bracketed' bicycle gear systems: * Xenon Nine speed, to fill in the back of the catalog, "You can't possibly want the cheap stuff! Everyone but everyone has at least Ten!" * New Record Eleven, well, just because, "It's the top of the range" * Everything else, for everyone else, "I need a lot of gear choices, but not quite the professional Eleven gear" As the legendary "Good-Better-Best", the whole idea is to sell a lot of the midrange product. Eleven addresses that, making Ten a 'not excessive by comparison' choice. It's nearly trite to summarize as, "The crap we sold you last year is passé; Here's the new one". -- Andrew Muzi <www.yellowjersey.org/> Open every day since 1 April, 1971 ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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#10 |
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I've noticed talking to bicyclists that most believe the more gears
one has the easier bicycling becomes, both in the flatland and mountains. These are also the folks who believe bicycle saddles are too hard, handlebars too low and narrow and many other earmarks of a non bicyclist. We are not Cummins 6-cylinder truck diesels that runs best at one RPM, just as starting from a stop sign requires running through the gears as a loaded ready-mix truck may. Unfortunately these folks are in the majority and spend the most on a bicycle that, like a jacked up black SUV with multiple rumbling exhaust pipes lends credibility to their existence. http://www.cummins.com/cmi/index.js...3&newsInfo=true The rate at which one can climb long grades depends more on lungs and heart than hardware and carbon fiber. Most of these folks have not tried anything like the Stelvio pass in Italy or for that matter, Sonora Pass in California. http://tinyurl.com/agnvh Jobst |
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#11 |
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In article <48478307$0$14352$e4fe514c@news.xs4all.nl>,
Derk <nobody@invalid.org> wrote: > shayana.kadidal@gmail.com wrote: > > > WHY ISN'T THE ONLY THING BEING DISCUSSED ON THIS BOARD THE TOTALLY > > UNCONFIRMED RUMORS OF IMPENDING CAMPY 11 SPEED???!!! > Old news: I brought it 17/05/08 to this newsgroup already: > > "New Campa Record and Chorus 11 speed" > > Derk Yeah, but we didn't believe you .I don't know what to say, except that when you mentioned it, I said it sounded pretty stupid. James Huang is usually pretty reliable on this sort of stuff, so I accept that there's a high chance this is really going to happen. It's still stupid. On the other hand, I am a nine-speed retrogrouch, and can only suppose that the 8-speed retrogrouches are pointing at me and saying "A BRIDGE TOO FAR!" Jobst is famously a 6-speed (or was it 7?) retrogrouch, and somehow in an era of drivetrains that go to 11, his position seems more sensible, not less. Eagerly awaiting the production quad-ring drivetrain, -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@gmail.com http://www.wiredcola.com/ "In other newsgroups, they killfile trolls." "In rec.bicycles.racing, we coach them." |
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#12 |
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In article <rgag44lh09rnta905cqld1kpmh64ivb0bh@4ax.com>,
John Forrest Tomlinson <usenetremove@jt10000.com> wrote: > On Thu, 5 Jun 2008 10:03:42 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot > <i_am_cycle_pathic@yahoo.ca> wrote: > > >11 teeth to 26 > >teeth in one-tooth increments? > > For me, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 28 would be > desirable. Closer than that would have no value. JT: don't throw out your old stuff. I'll be happy to recycle it for you. -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@gmail.com http://www.wiredcola.com/ "In other newsgroups, they killfile trolls." "In rec.bicycles.racing, we coach them." |
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#13 |
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>For me, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 28 would be desirable.
Assuming you are running a 50-34, you are adding a 32.8" to a 36.7" at the low end... JG |
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#14 |
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Ryan Cousineau wrote:
> Yeah, but we didn't believe you .I hoped I was wrong too. This is something we just don't need. I'd be very happy with a Centaur gruppo with 100% aluminium parts and the old type shifters that let you decide how many gears you want to shift up or down. > I don't know what to say, except that when you mentioned it, I said it > sounded pretty stupid. James Huang is usually pretty reliable on this > sort of stuff Isn't that the guy who's always very excited about every new product? > It's still stupid. On the other hand, I am a nine-speed retrogrouch I have 9 speed Dura-Ace on all my bikes and stock 9s parts for decades to come. Derk |
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#15 |
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<jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org> wrote in message news:48489b3d$0$17171$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > I've noticed talking to bicyclists that most believe the more gears > one has the easier bicycling becomes, both in the flatland and > mountains. These are also the folks who believe bicycle saddles are > too hard, handlebars too low and narrow and many other earmarks of a > non bicyclist. > > We are not Cummins 6-cylinder truck diesels that runs best at one RPM, > just as starting from a stop sign requires running through the gears > as a loaded ready-mix truck may. Unfortunately these folks are in the > majority and spend the most on a bicycle that, like a jacked up black > SUV with multiple rumbling exhaust pipes lends credibility to their > existence. > > http://www.cummins.com/cmi/index.js...3&newsInfo=true > > The rate at which one can climb long grades depends more on lungs and > heart than hardware and carbon fiber. Most of these folks have not > tried anything like the Stelvio pass in Italy or for that matter, > Sonora Pass in California. > > http://tinyurl.com/agnvh > > Jobst Derailleurs were not permitted in the Tour de France until the late 1930s. On a CR Fausto Coppi memorial ride in Woodside last summer there were 2 guys riding 1949 Bianchi Paris-Roubaix bikes with 50T chainrings and 4 speed freewheels. These bikes had the single lever version of Cambio Corsa shifters. http://www.classiclightweights.co.uk/bianchipr.html The bikes were only 4 speeds but both riders were off the front for most of the ride! Chas. |
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