The weight seems to be a bit of a red herring as all together complete with shifter etc the Rohloff appears to be slightly lighter than the kinderney.
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Yes. Even if the new hub was significantly lighter than the Rohloff, a few hundred grams difference in weight wouldn't matter to me on my large-wheel bikes.
I would have been interested in a light, efficient and reliable (and probably expensive) hub with 8 or more gears for use on my "touring" Brompton, on this the weight does matter to me, because I often carry the folded bike.
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I use 5 different gear hubs:
Sturmey Archer 3-speed: light at about 970g (hub only), efficient, very reliable, very inexpensive, OK for some local use but not suitable for very hilly areas or long rides. On one of my visitor bikes and my wife's Brompton, she doesn't like the two lever gear change on the S5/2.
Sturmey Archer S5/2 5-speed from the early 1980's: slightly heavier than the 3-speed, slightly less efficient in the highest and lowest gears, reliable enough, very inexpensive (I have 3 in use and 2 spare). Despite the limited range and odd gear spacing, OK for me for long rides in moderately hilly areas so long as I don't have too much luggage. I use these hubs on my old 650B wheeled utility bike used for local shopping, survey work, etc. and on my two Bromptons, on the touring Brompton I have a double 13/19 rear sprocket to increase the gear range.
Shimano Nexus 7 : fairly heavy, seems noticeably less efficient than the S5/2 and Shimano 8, reliable so far, fairly inexpensive, similar gear range to the S5/2 but better gear spacing. This is now on one of my visitor bikes, used only for short local rides.
Shimano Nexus 8 Premium: fairly heavy, seems efficient, reliable so far, fairly inexpensive, enough gear range for all my local use, generally better gear spacing than the Sturmey 5. I think the Shimano 8 would be OK for me for loaded touring except in hilly areas. Shimano 8 is reputed to be less sensitive to cable adjustment than the Shimano 11. And the Shimano 8 is inexpensive enough to replace if it does break, so long as this doesn't happen too often. On my recent Thorn Raven Tour utility bike and my wife's large wheel bike.
Rohloff: About the same weight as the Shimano 8, seems as efficient, supposed to be very reliable, too expensive to risk on a local errand bike, closer gear spacing than the Shimano 8 is a plus on long rides, enough gear range for anything I do. As the Rohloff shifts at the hub, a cable adjustment issue can't damage it. On my Thorn Raven Tour tourer and my new Raven Sport Tour.
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The Shimano 11 would have been a viable alternative to Rohloff for me, but I don't trust it's reliability. It appears to be very sensitive to cable adjustment.
The Sturmey Archer Sprinter 5-speed from the mid 1980's was also very sensitive to cable adjustment, and I broke one of these very quickly due to the cable going out of adjustment. I had had no problems with the old model, so bought some second-hand.