T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1716.1 | REALLY THINK.... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Tue Aug 28 1990 07:12 | 14 |
| My experience has been that if you're serious about upgrades,
do it all, if you can. Yes, you'll have the better components
when you want to upgrade the frame, but dollars to donuts, you'll
want better components when that time comes.
Upgrading components (unlees you catch a sale or do well at the
local b/s is usually more expensive too. You'd be better off
putting thought into the next move. You almost always make out
better when you buy a "packaged" bicycle than if you are on
your own collecting components.
Just my $.02,
Chip
|
1716.2 | First stop, new wheels | WAGON::HARRIS | | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:19 | 15 |
| In my opinion, if you want to do a partial upgrade, the best
investment you can make is in new wheels. I started riding,
about eight years ago, on a fairly generic bicycle. After
several months, I had new, lighter wheels built (the bicycle
was about $300, new wheels alone were close to $150). They
made an amazing difference.
A year later, I got a great deal on a bicycle that someone
else had built up. Rather than use the sewups that were
included, I've been using the clinchers that I already had.
Just last week, after over six years of use, my husband took
them apart, and built new wheels, using the same hubs. While
he was doing this, I still had my second set of wheels to use.
Peggy
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1716.3 | Sage advice | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:10 | 5 |
| Hmm, good points. Although I hate to put money into a cheap mountain
bike, I'm leaning toward just buying the crank for it and leaving the
Shogun alone for a while. Maybe I'll try to learn wheelbuilding this
winter.
Joe
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1716.4 | Upgrading or Spending Money | WAV13::DELORIEA | Resurrect the DEC Bike Club | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:41 | 14 |
|
>> Hmm, good points. Although I hate to put money into a cheap mountain
>> bike, I'm leaning toward just buying the crank for it and leaving the
Upgrades should be done on a frame that is worth upgrades. You wouldn't put
Dura ace on a Huffy would you. The frame is the most important component, its
the foundation of the bike. To put a stiff crankset on a bike that has a
flexable frame in the bottom bracket area, is not going to improve anything.
You're better off saving your money towards a bike/frame that is worth hanging
the next generation of goodies. I will agree that upgrading wheel sets is worth
it on any bike. Seeing that you can always use an extra set of wheels for back
up.
Tom "who uses his old sport tourer that he never upgraded for his winterbeater"
|
1716.5 | Just need to buy SOMETHING! | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 12:09 | 22 |
| I should probably explain that I do use the mountain bike a good deal
and expect to be using it more during the winter. As it stands, the
crank is really awful. The frame, I'm sure, would not be suitable for
serious mountain riding, but that really isn't in its future anyway.
The crank that's on it is really the only component that's bad enough
to make the bike unpleasant to ride. It seems as if sinking the sixty
dollars into the crankset/bottom bracket could be worth it, since the
total outlay for the bike will still be under $300.00, including the
bike, fenders, blackburn rack, and Ideale saddle, which is just about
the retail price for the bike alone. I suspect that to get something
substantially better, I'd have to spend close to double that.
So, the point is not whether or not I want to do what needs to be done
on the mountain bike, I do plan to do SOMETHING to rectify the
situation. The question I'm asking myself is whether I'd be better off
spending the money on the road bike, which at least has a half decent
frame, and using it's still-servicable parts to repair the mountain
bike? The cranks & bottom brackets are about the same price either
way (if I use Shimono 105 parts, so the main difference in price would be
the front derailleur, which IO assume I'd have to move to the mountain bike
since Id be going from a 3-ring to a 2-ring crank. If you follow that
you're probably as flakey as I am!
|
1716.6 | Move the Exage to Mt. Bike | DISCVR::HUI | | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:26 | 46 |
| It seems like you want to replace the crank on the mountain bike
because the rubbing noise under heavy load is driving you crazy. So you
just want to know if you should spend $60 to replacing the crank and BB
on the mountain bike or upgrade the road bike with 105SC, 600 or
Athena crank and moving the Exage to the mountain bike.
I would put the crank from the Katana over to te Royce just to make
sure everything is alright before I go out search for the upgrade on te
road bike. As in some previous reply, a groupo or a complete bike with
groupo is cheaper then going out and get single components one at a
time. But it's not worth spending $350 on a 600 grouppo if you only
need a crank and BB. In most catalogs these days (Nashbar and
Performance), they only sell the components individually.
Supposing the Exage is fine on the Royce and you are happy with it.
Then you can start looking at the upgrade on the Katana. I don't think
you have to move your Front Derailluer over to the mountain bike.
though. The Mt. bike derailluers are designed a little different to
compensate for the granny grear. But with a little adjustment. You
should not have any trouble with the Eaxage 52/42 with the Mt. bike
F.derailluer
As for the upgrade, my preference is the 600 w/ round chainrings over
the Athena if you have the $100. If you want the cheaper route with
the 105SC. I would spend the extra $5 on the 600 BB which would be
$80 total for that set up.
The reason I picked the 600 over the Athena in this case is because the
600 is lighter, cheaper ($107 vs. $100) and the rest of your drive
train is Shimano. Also a new chainring for the 600 is about 1/2 the
cost of the Campy if you decide to switch the inner ring to a 39. But
NOTE: Prices are from Performance Catalog
I am sure ther are other who would pick the Athena instead and they
probably have there own reasons. But for me, I like the 600.
I am supposing you have all the tools to do the job yourself (crank
extractor, 14/15mm socket, lockring wrench, spanner, and a fixcup
wrench). If you don't, you might save a little money to get it done at
a good shop because the toolcan be expensive.
Good Luck,
huey
|
1716.7 | That's the idea | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:35 | 6 |
| re [.-1]
Ya got it just right! If I don't have to replace the derailleur
then it looks even more attractive. I have some of the tools, and was
planning on adding to my tool set anyway (since I just bought a Park
bicycle stand and want to put it to some use!) I probably will keep it
all Shimono 600. Thanks.
|
1716.8 | A (sort of) related question | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:36 | 3 |
| I just checked out the components on my Katana, & found that they are
Shimono Exage Sport. Does anyone know what lines Shimono has below the
105?
|
1716.9 | SPORT LX | WMOIS::DRIVETTS | Dave Rivetts, WMO, USCD, 241-4627 | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:42 | 3 |
| Between the Exage Sport and the 105 is the Sport LX.
Dave
|
1716.10 | Thanks Dave | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:58 | 1 |
|
|
1716.11 | What was the question again??? | WAV13::DELORIEA | Resurrect the DEC Bike Club | Tue Aug 28 1990 15:42 | 11 |
| Joe
Are you sure it's the crank and not the frame that is causing the flex/rubbing?
Usually the rubbing is just the chain against the front derailleur and a little
trim adjustment on the derailleur will silence it. This is caused by the frame
flexing more often, than by the crank & BB. Ask any Vitus 979 owner ;-)
If this noise is the only problem that you are trying to fix then I don't think
a new BB and crank will solve it.
Tom
|
1716.12 | Not really . . .but I THINK so | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 15:51 | 11 |
| [re -1] I make it a point to never be TOO sure about ANYTHING. But,
let's see how I can explain this . . . The crank spider (right
terminology?) has a cover of some sor on it, with extends over the
perimiter of the larger chain ring, presumably, to keep the chain from
going off the large chain ring when ineptly shifted (as I frequently do
on my other bike ;-). When pedaled with low tension, everything is
fine. When you put some muscle into it, however, the assembly appears
to deform so as to cause the chain to contact that cover (ie: the space
between the cover and the chain ring gets smaller in one spot). I had
someone (slightly) more experienced ride on it & his diagnosis was
that it was something in the crankset flexing. Other opinions?
|
1716.13 | aluminum: $.33 a lb.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | IronFish Tamer. | Tue Aug 28 1990 17:23 | 11 |
| > fine. When you put some muscle into it, however, the assembly appears
> to deform so as to cause the chain to contact that cover (ie: the space
> between the cover and the chain ring gets smaller in one spot). I had
How's about, chuck the cover, and/or bend it so's it isn't narrower. I
can't believe that one a crank made of anything heavier than Velveeta
that the 'chainring protector' is flexing enough to interfere
independent of the chainwheels flexing, too... especially that the gap
changes under load (unless something's loose....). Chucking the cover
may be all you need to do...
ken
|
1716.14 | Remove the chainring guard | BAGELS::GOTANTAS | | Tue Aug 28 1990 17:31 | 6 |
| If the chain is sometimes rubbing against the chainring guard,
why not just remove the guard? (The ones that I have seen bolt or
screw on to the large chainring.) You should be able to adjust the
front derailleur so that it doesn't "overshift" the large chainring.
This seems cheaper and easier than replacing the BB and crank...
|
1716.15 | What a concept! | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures | Tue Aug 28 1990 17:37 | 1 |
| I'll have to take a look at it tonight & see if I can remove the guard.
|
1716.16 | Yes, I've got 105SC on my bike | JUMBLY::MACFADYEN | Itchy feet | Wed Aug 29 1990 07:01 | 13 |
| ><<< Note 1716.8 by CRBOSS::BEFUMO "Knowledge perishes - Understanding endures" >>>
> -< A (sort of) related question >-
>
> I just checked out the components on my Katana, & found that they are
> Shimono Exage Sport. Does anyone know what lines Shimono has below the
> 105?
The smart group to get would be Shimano RX100, which has most if not
all of the features of 105SC but at a lower price. If it works anything
like as well as 105SC it ought to be excellent value.
Rod
|
1716.17 | More details | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:17 | 10 |
| re [.14] I took a closer look at the crank assembly the other night.
What I found was that there really isn't a seperate guard. The crank
spyder is the full size of the larger chain ring, with a flat ring
around the circumference. It was this outer rim that I mistook for a
guard. the chain rings fasten to the inside of this outer ring. Looks
pretty chinzy, all in all. Anyway, what happens is that when you're
pedaling down hard on the left pedal, at the point where the crank arm
is approximately parallel with the ground, the chain binds against that
outer ring. If I pedal gently, or put it up on the stand, it doesn't
happen.
|
1716.18 | Sounds like a new one is in order | WAV13::DELORIEA | Resurrect the DEC Bike Club | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:49 | 8 |
| RE>-1
It sounds like a real cheapo crank. I saw in NASHBAR's catalog #70 on the back
cover there was a SAKAE "RADIUS" crank for only $29.95 and it *includes* the
english BB. Give them a call and see if they still have any. This looks to be
what you need (and your wife will like the price also;-)
Tom
|
1716.19 | Fun costs | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Thu Aug 30 1990 10:56 | 3 |
| Thanks, I didn't notice that one - I'll have to check it out, and
you're right - my wife is starting to marvel how ALL of my hobbies
tend to cost big $$$$s
|