Author Topic: Rohloff factory tour in photos and text  (Read 3533 times)

martinf

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Re: Rohloff factory tour in photos and text
« Reply #15 on: July 17, 2023, 08:08:57 pm »
my preference would be for some wider gaps in the low range and closer in the high*. Dropping down from 2nd to bottom doesn't always feel much of a difference, but sometimes going 13 to 14 feels a huge gap.  Not having the perfect higher ratios doesn't really matter riding solo, it can make it harder staying in a group.

* My preferred 11-28 9 speed cassette (When I used such things) had over 16% gaps at the bottom and under 9% at the top.

Agree with that. When I ran derailleur gears I generally had 2 or 3 close gears at the top end of the range with 1 or 2 tooth gaps, then progressively wider at the low end.

I've done something similar on a recent conversion on my 2009 "light" Brompton, to mimic the recent Brompton "P-line" model that has 4 derailleur gears.

Although I prefer the S5/2 hub gearing for robustness, reliability and low maintenance, a lightweight wheel and a limited number of derailleur gears makes it easier to carry, an important factor as I use this bike mainly for short urban trips and often carry it into buildings or ferries.

By combining this change with a couple of other mods I knocked about 1 kg off the weight, not important when riding but it makes a big difference when carrying the folded bike.

I currently have six sprockets -  27,19,17,15,13,12

Two close gears at the top end, 3 reasonably close gears in the middle, then a big jump when I need something for steep hills.   

Slightly more overall range than the S5/2 configuration, and more useful gearing on the flat. The trade-off will be more maintenance, and almost certainly more frequent chain and sprocket replacement.
« Last Edit: July 17, 2023, 10:44:30 pm by martinf »

mickeg

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Re: Rohloff factory tour in photos and text
« Reply #16 on: July 17, 2023, 08:40:46 pm »
..., but my preference would be for some wider gaps in the low range and closer in the high*. ...

I set up my derailleur touring bikes as half step plus granny.  Thus, my mid range and higher gears are closely spaced, the lowest few gears are quite far apart.  Thus, the spacing is closest where I spend most of my time.

Photo is of my Sherpa drive train, crank is 46/42/24, cassette is a Sram eight speed 11/32 (11/12/14/16/21/26/32).

I avoid using the two most cross chained gears for each chainring, thus use 18 of the 24 gears.
https://gear-calculator.com/?GR=DERS&KB=24,42,46&RZ=11,12,14,16,18,21,26,32&UF=2200&TF=72&SL=2.2&UN=MPH&DV=teethhttps://gear-calculator.com/?GR=DERS&KB=24,42,46&RZ=11,12,14,16,18,21,26,32&UF=2200&TF=72&SL=2.2&UN=MPH&DV=teeth