Are any of you thinking of visiting the London Bike Show?
Now that's more like it! That's the Rohloff we know and love. You're wasted on cycling, Iain; you shoulda been a diplomat: Lord MacSpud of the Congress of Vienna!
HEBIE'S INTENTIONS VIS A VIS THE CHAINGLIDER AND THE NEW ROHLOFF SPROCKET
I'm particularly glad to hear that "Hebie since my last email reply do seem to show their positive interest in redesigning the Chainglider to accommodate our new splines sprockets", but my joy is altruistic, for those whose bikes have more space in their rear triangle. It won't fit my bike. There just isn't the width.
HOW THE CHAINGLIDER WORKS
I'm also happy to discover from an authoritative source how the Chainglider works with the Rolloff -- the back end rides on the lip of the threaded sprocket and holds the Chainglider clear of the chain, which accounts for the Chainglider inside being so innocent of chain oil. Also interesting that the Rohloff-specific Chainglider apparently causes less drag than the generic kind for cheaper boxes, which rides on the chain.
AN OPPORTUNITY TO PUT OUR VIEWPOINT
Moving on to practical politicking, if a forum member were to take up the invitation to speak to a Rohloff representative at the London show, what do we want him/her/it to say? Besides the man from Rohloff, who issued the invitation, there might also be someone from Hebie, so another opportunity opens up. Could I suggest you copy the text below and add your own numbered items.
AGENDA FOR THE MAN FROM ROHLOFF
1. We love Rohloff, of course.
2. The very minimum Rohloff should do to keep faith with customers is to maintain the spinner sprocket in production at the present high quality so that customers' expensive frames aren't made obsolete by a component manufacturer making a hostile specification change. This business of stopping manufacture of the threaded sprocket isn't just contrary to existing customers' interests but to the whole Rohloff ethos of keeping the gearbox working forever. If you can't get consumable parts for a component that continue to fit to and work with preexisting machinery, the component itself instantly becomes surplus to requirements.
3. As has been demonstrated, the Hebie Chainglider is important to some Rohloff owners. We would appreciate it if Rohloff would facilitate Hebie's production of not only a Chainglider for the splined sprockets, but for a wider variety of chainrings that work with existing and future Rohloff-fit Chainglider back pieces.
4. Rohloff has entirely overlooked the roadie market (for instance to reduce maintenance on winter training bikes), which finds a 54mm tread factor (Q) undesirable and a 58mm Q unacceptable. They demand a narrower Q, say 46mm.
5.
AGENDA FOR THE MAN FROM HEBIE
1. We love the Chainglider. We're big boosters of it.
2. The Rohloff gearbox for practical purposes lasts forever, so the threaded sprocket sizes will constitute a market for Chaingliders for many years yet.
3. Some of us would love to love the Chainglider but Hebie doesn't make a suitable chainring cover to work with the existing Rohloff 15-17T back end. (Some specific sizes like a 36T front end, for which we know there is a demand, could be mentioned.) The lowest sprocket ratio Rohloff permits is currently 1.9.
4.