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  #16  
Old 11-05-2024, 08:37 PM
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BumbleBeeDave BumbleBeeDave is offline
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Sounds like a solution.

That Road Link is a Wolf Tooth product? Keeping the 31-48 crank ans just being able to go down to 42 sounds ideal. What's the cassette? SRAM? Shimano?

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Originally Posted by bikinchris View Post
Scratch all of that. Get a Road Link and put a cassette with a 42 tooth low gear and be done with it.
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  #17  
Old 11-05-2024, 08:45 PM
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Both SRAM and Shimano make 11-42 11-spd cassettes for mountain bike applications. You will need to adjust the spacer on your freehub to fit the MTB cassette on a road freehub properly. Something like the Shimano SLX CS-M7000 should shift nicely and doesn't cost an arm and a leg in case the experiment doesn't work out.

https://www.jensonusa.com/Shimano-SLX-CS-M7000-Cassette

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Originally Posted by BumbleBeeDave View Post
That Road Link is a Wolf Tooth product? Keeping the 31-48 crank ans just being able to go down to 42 sounds ideal. What's the cassette? SRAM? Shimano?
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  #18  
Old 11-05-2024, 08:53 PM
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oooh . . .

At $72 that works for me to experiment with. I've seen some of those MTB dinner plate cassettes at some insane prices.

Quote:
Originally Posted by fa63 View Post
Both SRAM and Shimano make 11-42 11-spd cassettes for mountain bike applications. You will need to adjust the spacer on your freehub to fit the MTB cassette on a road freehub properly. Something like the Shimano SLX CS-M7000 should shift nicely and doesn't cost an arm and a leg in case the experiment doesn't work out.

https://www.jensonusa.com/Shimano-SLX-CS-M7000-Cassette
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  #19  
Old Yesterday, 11:49 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hokoman View Post
The white industries cranks have jumps as high as 20 teeth from the small to large. I replaced a 50/34 with a 46/30. I also have a set of cranks that are 44/24 - those are going on a bikepacking bike, so can't comment on the shifting, but can't imagine that WI would sell a terrible shifting crankset.

Something like this might work well...they offer chainrings in 2 teeth increments so you can customize. More expensive up front, but might be a better solution for lower gearing than going bigger cassette jumps.
I have a WI VBC crankset on my main all-road bike. I used to run 48/30 (with a 12-30 cassette), and before my 11-days trip to the Alps this summer I switched to 46/28 (with 11-36 cassette). It's basically a 1-by-with-granny setup. Most of the times I'm in the "big" ring. I have DT shifters, and the shifting performance between the rings is fine. For the shift to the smaller chainring you have to ease up quite a bit; the other direction is very smooth.

I'm really glad I had gears as low as I did. On an 11-day trip with some luggage, it's super helpful to be able to spin up many mountains passes in zone 2.
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  #20  
Old Yesterday, 12:02 PM
truth truth is online now
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What 11 speed 11-36 cassettes are people using?

I don't think Shimano makes one, do they?
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  #21  
Old Yesterday, 12:14 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by truth View Post
what 11 speed 11-36 cassettes are people using?

I don't think shimano makes one, do they?
cs-hg710
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  #22  
Old Yesterday, 12:59 PM
Wunder Wunder is online now
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As noted I'd start with an 11 speed 11-40 or 11-42 cassette and see if you can make it work. You'll almost certainly need a longer chain and increase B-Screw tension but it might work okay WITHOUT using a road link. My understanding is that the road link will help if you can't get the derailleur to shift onto the 40 or 42 even with the B-screw all the way in but you'll still have the same chain capacity concerns (likely slack chain in the small/small).
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  #23  
Old Yesterday, 02:26 PM
Dave Dave is offline
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Every 4 teeth requires another inch of chain. Use the chain length formula.
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  #24  
Old Yesterday, 02:52 PM
fried bake fried bake is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fa63 View Post
This is the main problem for me with 1x; the jump between cogs. Some people seem not sensitive to it at all but I guess I am.

You could switch out to a Shimano 46/30 crankset in the front, and also go with a 11/40 cassette in the rear. I don't think the 6800 rear derailleur will work with that cassette without a RoadLink; people report that the newer RX or GRX derailleurs can.
No road link needed on my Bianchi with a 46/30 and 11-40 Shimano cassette.
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  #25  
Old Yesterday, 06:27 PM
robertbb robertbb is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EB View Post
cs-hg710
That's 12 speed.

The 11 speed version was cs-hg700 and it was "only" 11-34, not 11-36. Has some very nice jumps mid-cassette, very unique offering and a great climbing cassette.
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  #26  
Old Yesterday, 06:44 PM
EB EB is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by robertbb View Post
That's 12 speed.

The 11 speed version was cs-hg700 and it was "only" 11-34, not 11-36. Has some very nice jumps mid-cassette, very unique offering and a great climbing cassette.
Doh, you're right. I meant to say SRAM PG-1170.
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  #27  
Old Today, 06:59 AM
jacrider jacrider is offline
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Back to the original poster, I was facing the same question recently.

Ended up with a mix of DA and GRX. DA shifters/brakes/chain. GRX derailleurs to shift a bigger cassette. A Rotor crankset with 48/31. One wheelset has the DA 11-34 cassette and a more gravel focused wheelset has the 105 11-36 cassette.

So can run a 31/36 when needed. Have heard of people running a MTB cassette (11-40?) on the GRX derailleurs without the Wolf extension thingy.

This is better than what the bike had previously - a 12 speed Campy Chorus where max was 32/34.
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