#31
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#32
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This is interesting. I happen to service several of my riding buddies bikes, and several of them have SRAM Red AXS on it with 20K+ miles and no issues. And every time I have needed support from SRAM, they have been very helpful...
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#33
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Shad, Gunnar Roadie, Look 765 Optimum, Spesh Aethos |
#34
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This is where we're at. The only thing I learned from the training is that you weren't supposed to clean the old 11 speed stuff with anything other than Dawn and unicorn tears. Like where was that memo? Those things have been tossed in the parts cleaner since inception
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#35
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But their MTB stuff back in the day was *amazing* for me. At least one of my bikes was totally transformed by taking Shimano stuff off and putting SRAM on back when SRAM switched to "exact actuation" because the Shimano stuff was so sensitive that suspension travel could cause the rear derailleur to skip. There were tons of hacks and constant tuning to make Shimano not skip but then SRAM it was just like set and forget and it was perfect all the time. And I had an X.0 group that was absolutely unkillable. Rode it for more than a decade in all weather wtih minimal maintenance. Even the chain and cassette lasted way way longer than they I ever thought they should. I wasn't even good about cleaning the bike. But my current bike has 1x Eagle and that chain and cassette seem like they are having trouble after 2 years. No idea what mileage it is, but it's starting to skip on those tiny little cogs that you ride in way too often since the bike has a 30t ring. The derailleur and shifter are fine though at least. And that current bike I'm much better about cleaning. I am fairly happy with my SRAM brakes after ditching the organic pads. They are quiet and powerful, good feel, etc.. My recalled cranks were totally fine all the years I was on them and then were problematic after inspection. I think these Shimano cranks are very very sensitive to the chainring installation being space flight grade in the factory. They need to be perfectly clean and you need a damn fine torque wrench setup to get them perfectly torqued evenly across the bolts, and then they will be fine. The LBS that inspected them was not capable of putting them back together with that level of precision. Last edited by benb; 10-07-2024 at 09:48 AM. |
#36
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As far as my experience with Campy, can't say anything but good stuff about it.. BUT, I also have the same experience with all of the Shimano and SRAM stuff I've owned (datign back to 2007ish Shimano/SRAM).. maybe I don't put the miles in that other folks that have issues do, but I still haven't had any issues with any properly adjusted groupset I've had..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#37
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Lower end Eagle chains (GX) wear out pretty fast. The higher end (XO1 etc.) last a really long time.
The flat top chains are even more durable. Eagle cassettes are also very durable - again, with the higher end variety lasting a lot longer. Eagle chainrings on the other hand are not durable, and in my experience you can go through several of them before the chain wears out. SRAM does sell a slightly heavier stainless steel chainring that addresses this. |
#38
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I'm not sure there are many mechanical Red RDs left that survived actual mileage. And yes, they all eventually break. And no, there are no available parts. https://weightweenies.starbike.com/f...c.php?t=134965 |
#39
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Rage bait. It’s a common technique to boost engagement.
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#40
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I moved back to Shimano at around the time of the shadow RD and have been using it mostly ever since. Tried SRAM again when the 1X system was introduced but had the same issue and could never get the brakes to stop sounding like a turkey. My new experiences with the lower end SRAM stuff - Eagle - has not been good. But we will see. I like things to be robust. Honestly, I find most bike stuff to be a pain. My new Shimano brakes need a different adapter to install the brake bleed cup; and need another adapter for road versus mountain brakes. I have a countless number of tools to remove SRAM, Shimano and Campagnolo BB cups. Dot fluid for this, mineral oil for that, multiple chain tools to measure wear on SRAM, Shimano or Campagnolo chains. It just never ends. |
#41
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'Worth' is such a big word. A $zillion, Gucci purse is 'worth' it to some but not to others. My mechanical Rolex is 'worth it' to me, won't be buying even a high end Seiko or Casio any time soon..Same for motorcycles...I'd MUCH rather have a higher end Euro bike than a Japanese one...even if more expensive and 'maybe 'less reliable. This thread is about Shimano's really pisspoor response to broken cranks..For a company this big, with the tech they have($$), this shouldn't happen and if it DID, their response 'should' have been much better, IMHO. I'd say the same for sram when early gen chainrings were folding(I saw/warrantied 2 even tho I sold zero sram stuff)..the FIRST time, after the sram guy gave me the 'gee, never heard of that', PAID for the customer to buy a Chorus crank..since the customer refused to use a sram anything-crank... B ut back to shimano...really poor response to this seemingly ongoing crank gig.
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#42
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Tim |
#43
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I think one of the things that rubs people the wrong way a lot about this is I think plenty of us really thought of Shimano as being kind of head and shoulders above everyone else on cranks.
I know some periods there were/have been lighter options but the combination of lightness, stiffness, reliability, etc.. was pretty amazing for a long time and it stinks that reliability became an issue here. |
#44
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My LBS (which is awesome— no complaints whatsoever) sent my Ultegra cranks to Shimano even though they passed the mechanic’s inspection. My chainrings are worn, so I hoped to get a new crank rather than buying new rings for one that could still fail down the road. Shimano said the cranks are fine and are sending them back. So— buy new rings or bail and buy a different crankset? Praxis?
David |
#45
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