Mavic EX721 or D521 rims for those who go back a little further. Every pair I ever owned was/still is faultless even after a season in the alps and pretty much all mountain weight, outperformed much heavier downhill rims all day.
Local bearing supplier should be able to sort you out unless eastern were using some bizzare custom bearings which I doubt.the small cartridge bearings at the end of the spindle disintegrated on the right pedal, also when i opened it, the needle bearing is shot. The worst part now is where to source out these bearings.
HT nano flat pedals. thin, well designed. nicely concaved with good edges, size and pin placement, comfortable cheap. light. strong. durable.
Yep!Xt 4 pots - no complains, problem is the brake pads, the metallic ones is now rare.
Udi, I am about to buy some R0's to replace my T1's on the DH bike(T1 getting relegated to trail bike duty). I noticed the 2014 and 2015 master cylinders appear to be different(not the racing lever). Are they the same internally with just different outward appearances? The 2015 master cylinder looks just like my T1 mc, but the 2014 looks a little different.- Alex Supra D for me too, light / cheap / impressively strong.
- Formula brakes which many seem to hate, my 2011 Ones have been going forever and more consistently than anything else I've owned (virtually everything).
Rapid rise got off to a terrible start and gained a stigma.Rapid Rise makes a lot of sense... had great luck w/ the one I had and was surprised to hear they stopped making them.
With the 1x setups and faster bikes.i'm sure somewhere out there is someone who likes dual control
dual control is different than RRWith the 1x setups and faster bikes.
Rapid rise is magnificent.
Really is.
That's my experience.
Much faster shifting, especially when ripping along and a climb hits you in the face.
I just find the the RR transitions so smooth from clicking up the cassette when not pedaling. Then when turn the crank it engages the desired gear flawless. Sometimes you're going the entire way up the cassette. In the old days you could do the same thing clicking the front derailleur to drop down. RR also shifts smoother mid-way up a tough climb when you need another gear. Going downhill you can blast down the cassette with big throws off the shifter.and don't take my comment out of context. i always that RR was an interesting concept, but probably most useful in areas with short descents followed by short climbs.
Dual what? Brake levers that double as shifters? No thanks.i'm sure somewhere out there is someone who likes dual control
we are in the downhill forum.What was the beef w/ rapid rise though? Took a couple rides to unprogram my brain, but after that it was flawless.
Funny you say that... many moons ago my first dh bike came with this exact derailleur... fwiw it was a pretty much stock Schwinn homegrown factory straight 6 (i.e. a yeti straight six)... had an xtr rr.we are in the downhill forum.
Yes, for 2015 they switched to the T1 lever which is lighter, prior to this the RO had its own lever which was heavier.Udi, I am about to buy some R0's to replace my T1's on the DH bike(T1 getting relegated to trail bike duty). I noticed the 2014 and 2015 master cylinders appear to be different(not the racing lever). Are they the same internally with just different outward appearances? The 2015 master cylinder looks just like my T1 mc, but the 2014 looks a little different.
1st generation Saint had a rapid-rise derailleur.we are in the downhill forum.
shimano was taking the "shit sticks" approach. throw a bunch of shit out there, see what sticks.1st generation Saint had a rapid-rise derailleur.
Dude! Barring crash damage. 8 years is not a long life for a shifter or a rear mech.
- X7 shifters - lasted me 8 years until I sold that bike with no issues.
- X9 rear derailleur - another 8 year item. It's probably still going strong.
not sure what you are on about, 8 years is a damn long time for a shifter or mech in my book. I don't even ride that hard and the most i've gotten is 4 years. you have mid 90's shimano drivetrain products still in service? i know that UK mud/rain/ice will do a number on the wear parts, so where are you finding 7sp and 8sp chains and cassettes these days to go with those mid 90's mechs and shifters? if they are sitting on bikes that haven't been ridden in 10 years then that shit doesn't count. I have a derailleur from 1984 that's still going strong because I haven't used it in 27 years.Dude! Barring crash damage. 8 years is not a long life for a shifter or a rear mech.
I have many Shimano rear mechs and shifters (STX thru to XTs) still going strong from the mid 90s. and that's surviving UK winters (mud/rain/ice). not Marin dust and sun. for logevity older SRAM mid-range stuff was all pretty weak in comparison.
Are you for real?where are you finding 7sp and 8sp chains and cassettes these days to go with those mid 90's mechs and shifters?
Prior to that I was going through XT derailleurs annually at best , I raided our dead derailleur bin at work for XT b-tension springs many times keep mine going. XTR derailleur pivots wore out quickly and generally got sticky feeling. Shimano shifters just started to fall apart after heavy use.Dude! Barring crash damage. 8 years is not a long life for a shifter or a rear mech.
I have many Shimano rear mechs and shifters (STX thru to XTs) still going strong from the mid 90s. and that's surviving UK winters (mud/rain/ice). not Marin dust and sun. for logevity older SRAM mid-range stuff was all pretty weak in comparison.
Yes I was for real. I stand corrected, kudos to you sir. I still think you're crazy though. How many bikes do you own that get ridden regularly?Are you for real?
7/8 speed chains and cassettes are still readily available at pretty much every online retailer and LBS.
including high end stuff?Are you for real?
7/8 speed chains and cassettes are still readily available at pretty much every online retailer and LBS.
my short research found no high end options. like $8 chainsincluding high end stuff?
Depends what you call regularly.How many bikes do you own that get ridden regularly?
my old road bike that's permanently for stationary trainer use is 7spdI run 8 speed on my "Road" bike. Lot of good stuff out there. Isn't light though.
Here's the thing. There's no such thing as a high end chain or cassette that offers any actual performance gain (other than being a few g lighter)including high end stuff?
Ah I hope to expand mine to that size one day. I only have two at the moment. A DW DHR(doesn't get ridden as much as it should due to geographical lameness where I live) and a 6 Point. Hope to buy a new trail bike next fall, whilst not selling the 6 Point. I had a 24" BMX(Floval Flyer) that I would take to the BMX track to brush up on the basics, ended up selling it. I just ordered a new one though, a couple days ago actually, so will be adding that to the mix.Depends what you call regularly.
I own 10 bikes. (hardtails, DJ HTs, Slopestyle, BMX, Roadbike, DHers, XC)
4 are ridden pretty much every week. (usually 5 but haven't been riding road due to a fucked up knee)
I ride most days. often more than one ride each day.
et toi?
That sounds like absolute crap. I guess there is at least one person who would rather rebuild a wheel six times in a year than replace a tube six times.Bontrager King Earl rims. 530g, wide profile, and quite soft, for 6$ a piece on clearance. Went through 6 rims in a year, but 0 pinch flats - the rim would just bend and mush instead of causing a pinch. By far the best purchase I've ever made on a bicycle component