T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2256.1 | At least $200. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Apr 27 1992 12:45 | 29 |
| First the bad news:
I have seen a quote of $625 for doing that but it included the
dual pivot brake levers.
Now, more bad news:
You need a hub that will take an 8 speed cassette and they aren't
compatible with your 7 speed hub.
BUT, not so bad news:
If you get an 8 speed rear wheel built ($100, more or less, depending
on the rim and spokes and who does it) your rear deraileur will
probably work (recent model?)
if you want the 8 spd downtube shifters, you might get them
for $60 or less..
Then you need some cogs, maybe another $50.
BUT:
You rear dropouts are 126 mm and you will need 130mm. Some guys would
just force 'em, some whould get the rear triangle reset. I'd recommend
the latter ($50-100) but the cheap solution might work -- and it might
cause early fatigue in the frame, let me know [:-)].
ed
|
2256.2 | Sachs-Maillard Aris 8-speed | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Mon Apr 27 1992 14:31 | 26 |
| There is one other possibility...
If you check the latest Nashbar or Performance catalogs, such as
page 47 of the Performance bicycle catalog, you'll see that there
is such a thing as an "eight-speed" freewheel.
The company is Sachs-Maillard Aris, and I believe as of March 1992,
they are the only company producing an eight-speed freewheel.
These freewheels are purported to be compatible with Shimano's and
Campagnolo's indexed derailleur systems, road or MTB.
These puppies are made in France, but I believe the hub threading
is English.
If your current shifters are only seven-speed, you will have to
upgrade those. But I would wonder about your derailleur. Would you
need to replace it? I don't know. I do know that the "levers" are
actually controlling the indexing function, the derailleur itself
is merely a free-floating mechanism, no indexing involved. So...
A good question would be, does the original derailleur have enough
"throw" capability to handle the eight-speed setup.
Other more experienced users of these indexing systems would be
able to answer that.
Happy indexing...
|
2256.3 | Freewheel -- Still over $200 | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Mon Apr 27 1992 18:22 | 31 |
| You still need a hub to fit the 8-spd freewheel, and it's not safe
to just add spacers to the axle on a regular 7-spd hub. The
extra leverage on the freewheel side of an 8-spd hub is too much for
normal diameter axles to take without the risk of snapping.
Three rear hubs that *are* built to take this stress are American
Classic, Mavic, and Phil Wood (listed in order of strength, weakest to
strongest). They all have significantly wider axles than the norm,
"tapered" as follows to fit a rear dropout:
_______
main |___
axle ____ fits dropout (same diameter as normal axle)
_______|
I am currently riding Mavic with Regina 8-spd, with Shimano STI,
which is more finicky than downtube shifters, and I'm having no
problems, except for more frequent adjustment.
Any of these hubs you can buy rear hub only, for prices ranging
from $65 to $90. The least expensive 8-spd cluster I've seen
is a Maillard for $33. Then you need spokes, and someone to
build the wheel. Throw in another $50 if you want it done right.
Finally, *if* the 105 rear derailleur has enough range to cover
8 speeds (roughly 3-4mm more than 7-spd), you might be able to get away
with using Ultegra 8-spd shift levers (another $50).
I think you're going to have to go over $200.
Justin
|
2256.4 | Normal 7-speed spacing? | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Tue Apr 28 1992 09:30 | 19 |
| Justin,
I believe that the spacing on the Sachs-Maillard freewheel
is equivalent to a "normal" 7-speed, not the "narrow" seven.
As in the Suntour Winner "Ultra" 7-speed freewheels are the same
width as a "normal" 6-speed freewheel, and so on. (I own two older
Suntour winner 6-speed freewheels, and they fit on any "older"
5-speed axle.)
I don't really know, because I've never actually seen any of
these new Sachs-Maillard Aris systems.
I would love to get my hands on one of those 8-speed freewheels
though.
BTW, sell your C-record hubs yet?
Regards, Patrick
|
2256.5 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Apr 28 1992 09:32 | 4 |
| The Aris 7's are compatible with the Dura-Ace 7's so I would
call them "Normal".
ed
|
2256.6 | Utra 8-speed? | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Tue Apr 28 1992 10:15 | 14 |
| Hmmm...
So, the $64,000 question would be, is the Aris 8-speed the same
width as a "normal" 7-speed (As opposed to an "Ultra" 7-speed)?
There is a new chain for these pups...
Following is the scoop on the new Sachs/Sedisport SL chain:
Designed to work with the new 8-speed freewheels, the SL is .4 mm
narrower than Sedisport, with chamfered heat-treated outer plates
for improved shifting on Ultra and standard spaced freewheels.
Color: Silver. Weight: 310 gms. $27.95
So, is the new Aris freewheel an "Ultra" 8-speed, or a standard 8?
|
2256.7 | WHAT'S THE PROBLEM...BEFORE MAKING THE SOLUTION | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Tue Apr 28 1992 12:26 | 12 |
| I may be wrong, however I highly doubt that any 8 speed shifting
arrangement is the old "normal" spacing. What Shimano and the others
have done has taken the narrow 7 speed cluster and widen the rear end
another 5 mm to accomodate for the 8th cog.
Personally, if it was me and this was not designed to be a racing bike,
especially in Vt, I would change to a triple.
What is the real purpose of going from 7 to 8, lower gears or closer
ratio between shifts.
steve
|
2256.8 | 7-spd narrow = 7-spd normal | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Tue Apr 28 1992 14:24 | 17 |
| Yes, the hubs are sold.
There seems to be some confusion of a normal 6-spd with a normal 7-spd.
A normal 6-spd has the traditional spacing and requires 126mm between
dropouts. A narrow 6-spd fits in dropouts spaced at 120mm. Shimano's
first SIS shift systems and cassette hubs were normal 6-spds.
7-spds (designed to fit between dropouts that are 126mm apart) all
have what is referred to as "narrow" spacing (similar to spacing on
an Ultra-6), be they Regina, Maillard, or Suntour clusters, or Campy,
Shimano, or Suntour cassettes, to name a few. If you doubt this,
try a traditional width chain (if you can find one) on a 7-spd ;-).
8-spds supposedly are even more narrowly spaced than 7-spds, although
my experience with STI suggests that for all practical purposes, this
is not the case. If you want to know how fat an 8-spd cluster is, just
imagine another cog on top of your existing 7-spd.
|
2256.9 | Ultra vs. Standard spacing | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Tue Apr 28 1992 17:31 | 25 |
| Justin,
Glad to hear you've sold your hubs finally!
Guess what, I own two different types of freewheel clusters.
There is a difference between "Ultra" and "Standard".
I own three Suntour Winner 6-speed frewheels. Two are of the
"Ultra" variety, one is a "Standard" Winner freewheel.
The cog spacing on the Ultra freewheels is decidedly narrow, as
compared to the regular Winner freewheel. I would venture to say
that there IS a difference in spacing between Ultra & Standard.
Would it be safe to say:
-----------------------
Ultra 6-speed spacing = Standard 5-speed
Ultra 7-speed spacing = Standard 6-speed
Ultra 8-speed spacing = Standard 7-speed (Suntour ain't got it!)
But, I could be wrong. Do you have any older Winner freewheels
laying around? Check into it, I'd like to know if I'm slowly
losing my sanity as I get older. I mean, I'm riding a Claud Butler
that originally came with a 5-speed Regina on a set of Campagnolo
Gran Sport hubs. Archaic? Naaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...
|
2256.10 | NO SUCH THING AS STD 7 | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Tue Apr 28 1992 17:49 | 6 |
| re. 9 I don't believe there is anything marketed as standard 7 spacing,
7 speed only comes in the narrow version.
If others know better, please let me know.
steve
|
2256.11 | Indexed six-speed? | TLE::BODGE | Andy Bodge | Tue Apr 28 1992 18:07 | 23 |
| re: .8
> A narrow 6-spd fits in dropouts spaced at 120mm. [...]
> 7-spds (designed to fit between dropouts that are 126mm apart) all
> have what is referred to as "narrow" spacing (similar to spacing on
> an Ultra-6), be they Regina, Maillard, or Suntour clusters, or
> Campy, Shimano, or Suntour cassettes, to name a few.
I haven't measured, but my wife's bike (dating from about 1980) has
six speeds, so I assume it has 120 mm spacing on the dropouts and
narrow spacing on the cogs (e.g., Ultra-6). Does this mean that I
could buy shifters and rear derailleur intended for indexed 7-speed
shifting and use them on this bike (using the limit screws on the
derailleur to prevent attempts to engage the nonexistent 7th cog)? If
I could replace the cluster, chain, derailleur, and shifters to get
indexed shifting for her, I might consider it. Replacing the rear hub
and wheel and spreading the frame is more than I want to take on (might
be better to get a new bike at that point).
Finding a six-speed cluster that liked indexed shifting might be a
problem...
Andy
|
2256.12 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Apr 29 1992 07:40 | 5 |
| .11: I think your assumptions are incorrect. Measure it, read the
labels, then you only have to go back to the bike shop
once or twice.
ed
|
2256.13 | :-) | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Apr 29 1992 08:22 | 6 |
|
RE: .11 Ummm... just a question, but why would you want to go
to all that trouble to get six-speed indexed and still have six
speeds? Is your wife crying out for indexed?
-john "mr. friction" ellis :-) :-)
|
2256.14 | Rear-hub replacement likely | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:19 | 16 |
| Regarding base note #2256
Well Kevin, judging from the valued input gathered from our
consultants here, your original 105 cogset is most likely an
"Ultra" 7-speed. (Standard spacing highly improbable)
Whichever path you choose, either cassette-freehub, OR threaded
hub ("outdated" version), you will most likely be required to
replace your rear hub for the 8-speed conversion. Too bad really,
the simplicity of merely replacing your freewheel and your levers
sounded too good to be true. And indeed, it most likely is...
John "Mr. Friction" Ellis, you'd like my old Raleigh Professional,
NO indexing, NO aero cable routing, NO clipless pedals, only hand-
crafted beauty, and ALL of it original equipment Campagnolo.
Regards, Patrick
|
2256.15 | re:.11 | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:33 | 10 |
| re: .11
There is a good chance that she has regular 6 width, which means all
that needs to be done is to replace the freewheel with a new 7 speed
freewheel. You may need to add one real thin spacer on the freewheel
side to insure the smallest cog/chain doesn't rub. If it is 120mm
spacing, you can still save your hub. Just buy a new axle and spacing
to 125/126mm. If it is a low priced bike, it is probably not worth
cold setting the frame to the new width.
steve
|
2256.16 | Looking for max. benefit from min. $$ | TLE::BODGE | Andy Bodge | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:44 | 16 |
| re: .13 -
> why would you want to go
> to all that trouble to get six-speed indexed and still have six
> speeds?
She doesn't care how many speeds it has as long as it has a low enough
gear to permit easy hill climbing. But the stock setup overshifts
badly and the shifters are on the downtube; she prefers a more upright
position. Otherwise, she likes the bike well enough. I just
bought a new (indexed) bike myself, and I'm sure she'd enjoy indexed
shifting as much as I do, esp. if the shifters were on the handlebar.
Yes, I know - it would be easier to get a hybrid... In any case, I'll
apply the calipers liberally before doing anything rash.
Andy
|
2256.17 | facts about cassettes, 8sp | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:48 | 26 |
|
Last night a bike-expert friend said some things I did not know
about cassettes, though most of our esteemed readership may:
o In his opinion, the biggest advantage of cassettes over
freewheels is that the RH bearings can be more outboard,
which is a more robust design (less stress). I believe
Ed Fisher already mentioned this.
o Another possible advantage of cassettes is the inner cog
can be a *little* closer in (to hub flange) than with a
freewheel, meaning you could dish the wheel a *little* less
(again, more robust).
o You *can* replace the cassette without rebuilding the wheel.
(I did not know this.) Maybe not at home, but a bike shop can.
On 8-speeds:
o People in his purview are reporting more spoke-breakage
with 8-speed - probably, he thinks, because of the dishing.
I may relocate this reply to the Cassette note, but for now here
it is...
-john (mr. friction)
|
2256.18 | there's another solution | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:57 | 16 |
|
RE: .16
Andy, a colleague who recently got into biking started out with
a hybrid, and loves the upright position. So far, so good. He
has now graduated up to moderate-length (20-30 mile) club rides,
and an RB-2. As for many other cyclists, the MTB-style handlebars
become pretty uncomfortable on the wrists, etc., as length of ride
increases.
So going for an MTB-style bar may be "trading a headache for an upset
stomach." How long at a time does she plan to spend on the bike?
Of course *some people* might suggest the following answer to get
handlebar shifting but keep drop-bars: STI/Ergopower! Yes!
-john :-)
|
2256.19 | What do you gain - contd... | IDEFIX::HEMMINGS | Lanterne Rouge | Wed Apr 29 1992 10:59 | 5 |
| Think about what you are going to get out of the 8-speed, especially when you
are talking about having enough low gears. I had enough trouble getting a
7-speed with a 15 top, I think the 8-speed is most likely to offer either a 12(!)
or 13 top as an extra. Is it really worth it? You may even have to shell out
for a load of smaller chainrings to get something usable.
|
2256.20 | | HSOMAI::MOFFITT | | Wed Apr 29 1992 11:12 | 17 |
| (Way off the subject alert!)
re .18
I was beginning to have real wrist problems as I started pushing the
mileage on my Trek 7900 hybrid up to the 50 mile range. I found I was
trying all sorts of unusual hand positions, and finally put a set of
bar ends on the flat bars. They provide a couple more hand positions,
including one really stretched out. The downside is that it's hard to
reach the brake levers (although I am trying to track down a Dr. Dew)
and the ironic part is that the brake levers are in precisely the
location that the old 'idiot levers' were back when dropped bars on
cheap 10 speeds were thought to put the brake levers too far out of
reach for 'normal' upright riding.
As it sits now, I suspect that the current configuration will be just
fine for touring and moderate-speed rides. We have a *lot* of
single-track (er, dirt roads) down here in the Lone Star state.
|
2256.21 | Thanks | BTOVT::BESSETT_K | Have Guitar & Computer...will Travel | Wed Apr 29 1992 13:31 | 19 |
| Thanks for all the replys!
The idea of going from 7 to 8 speeds was just a meandering thought I
had. I don't mind the gearing on the Giant (53/39 13-23). I felt that
having an additional gear may help on those up hills that seem to be in
between the gears or on those down hills where 53/13 is not good
enough.
From the sounds of everything, this modification will be a bit pricey.
I was wonding if I could get away with this under $100 - $150....since
that may not be true, I will have to ponder this idea.
A few back asked what kind of bike. I have a '91 Giant 980C Cadex Racing
Bike. Although I have never raced (I started riding late last summer),
I would like to do a few causal races this summer. I spent a good share
of this past winter in the gym, now all I need is the milage.....
Kevin.
|
2256.22 | re. 21 | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Wed Apr 29 1992 14:10 | 9 |
| You can probably stop even considering the idea. You do not want
to spread the rear-end of a carbon or aluminum frame. I still suggest
measuring the distance between the dropouts, perhaps it is 8 speed
compatible.
You should consider building another wheel, putting a 12/26 7 speed on
it. Should cost you a lot less.
steve
|
2256.23 | | 52908::PELAZ::MACFADYEN | Secretly enriching my word power | Mon May 04 1992 05:14 | 17 |
| Speaking of spread rear-ends, I've just acquired a Raleigh frame which
announced itself as having 130mm rear width, which worried me since I have
a 126mm wheel I want to use with it. I was going to convert the wheel to 130mm
by using an 8-speed rear axle and a few washers to space the locknuts out.
Last night, just for fun, I took a ruler across the dropouts of the new frame
and guess what? The measurement was 128mm...
I wonder if this is deliberate on the part of Raleigh. 128mm will probably
accomodate 126mm or 130mm with no problem. I suspect my 8-speed axle will
not be needed.
Rod
PS The frame has TITANIUM main tubes! Move over Chip!
|
2256.25 | cog spacing cot'd | ASDG::SMITH | | Tue Jul 07 1992 15:03 | 26 |
| Reply .8 seems accurate and I can add that I recently read somewhere that
cassette cog spacing on Shimano systems was indeed reduced from something like
3.2 mm (7 spd) to 3.0 mm (8 spd) but that the intentional lateral
tolerance (slop) incorporated into the top jockey pulley of Shimano rear
derailleurs can accomodate that amount of inaccuracy in the indexing of
the shifters. If you center the shifting adjustment on the middle cog, then
the amount of slop in the jockey pulley is at least [7 x (0.2)]/2 = +/- 0.7 mm
to each side.....hm. Should be easy to measure.
Along those same lines I upgraded a modern cheap bike with no-name
friction shifting to indexing after noticing that the bike came with a Shimano
5-speed freewheel with the twisty cogs just like Dura-Ace.
I installed a Shimano 105 7-sp derailleur and shifters and found that
they indexed just fine. I fully expected that I would have to install
the shifter 6-speed converter doohickey that changes the amount of
shifter-cable-pull-per-click from stock (7-speed spacing) to
that of Shimano 6-speed, assuming that Shimano 5-speed was spaced the
same as Shimano 6-speed. Finding that it wasn't necessary
is once again evidence that the jockey pulley slop
obviates the need for complete shifter accuracy in some cases.
As for the range of 7-speed rear derailleurs, a friend of mine notes that
a 7-spd Ultegra rear derailleur handles an 8-speed Shimano cassette in
dandy fashion after changing to 8-speed Ultegra shifters.
|
2256.26 | COG SPACING | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Wed Jul 08 1992 15:46 | 6 |
| I believe, although not sure, that Dura-Ace 8 speed configurations have
a spacing of 2.9mm. Ultegra, XT, and XTR have 3.0mm, both 7 speed and
8 speed. This is according to Hugi manual I just received.
steve
|
2256.27 | Successful conversion | HYLNDR::OUELLETTE | Buddy Ouellette | Tue Apr 18 1995 17:40 | 33 |
| Well, it's been a while since there's been any activity in this note,
but I just wanted to share my successful experience in upgrading my
road bike's 7 spd drivetrain to 8 spd.
I bought a Schwinn Paramount Series 3 road bike back in 1990. It has
an oversized chromoly tubeset outfitted with the Shimano RX100 7 speed
index shifting group (downtube shifters). Last spring, I trashed my el
cheapo rear rim on a good-sized, New England pothole and ordered a
better wheelset from my local shop. I wanted Ultegra hubs with Mavic
Open4CD rims and DT doubled-butted spokes. When I picked them up, I
found out that the hub was 8 speed, and not 7 speed. Not really the
shop's fault - I forgot to mention that I had a 7 speed setup. "No
problem" says the owner - "I'll just give you this washer to slide over
the cassette body before you put the cogs on and you'll be fine."
At first, I was a little worried about getting the wheel to fit between
the 126 mm dropouts, but I just spread them out a bit, gave the
rear wheel an extra nudge, and it slid right into place. I also
replaced the Shimano chain with a Sedis Sport ATB and the drivetrain
performed flawlessly all year (2500 miles).
Naturally, when spring rolled around this year, I decided to replace my
7 speed cogset with an 8 speed, since I had an 8 speed hub. So, I
bought a used set of Ultegra 8 spd down-tube shifters from a fellow
noter and installed them with a new 8 spd cluster (13-23). I was able
to keep my RX100 rear derailler in place and it's been working fine.
Next spring, I plan to upgrade even further to the Ultegra STI levers.
Just an FYI for others who might be considering converting their steel
road bike from 7 to 8 spd.
PS - I wouldn't want to try this on an AL or carbon fiber frame.
|
2256.28 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue Apr 18 1995 17:50 | 5 |
| re: al and carbon fiber.
It works on them too. :-)
ed
|
2256.29 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Apr 19 1995 06:52 | 3 |
| ... and Ti! (i know).
Chip
|
2256.30 | 8 spd or the conversoin itself? | HYLNDR::OUELLETTE | Buddy Ouellette | Wed Apr 19 1995 09:51 | 12 |
|
> re: al and carbon fiber.
>
> It works on them too. :-)
Oh yea, I'm sure 8 spd works on these materials as well, my point is that
I've heard that spreading the dropouts from 126mm to the required 130mm isn't
recommended for AL and carbon fiber because these materials have different
properties than steel. Other extremists also recommend cold-setting the steel
before making the conversion from 7 to 8 spd.
-Buddy
|
2256.31 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Wed Apr 19 1995 11:07 | 6 |
| yes, I cold set 2 of my steel bikes when I converted them, didn't cold
set the other one. The Al and CF bikes that were converted have each
logged 1000's of miles since the "conversion." I also know of 1 dealer
who has converted these bikes and is not worried about them.
ed
|
2256.32 | shifting a little sloppy? | RCOCER::EDWARDS | | Thu Apr 20 1995 14:59 | 21 |
| I just upgraded a ~1991 TREK2100 (carbon-fiber) from 7 speed 105 to 8 speed STI Dura-Ace.
Actually I had the work done by a local independent repair guy.
Anyway, although he adjusted all components of the drivetrain according to Shimano's specs,
it's a little sloppy shifting. It seems like when shifting from a smaller rear cog to
larger ones that I have to engage the shifter to the first click PLUS some extra movement.
It's almost like having to trim each shift. If we adjust the barrel adjustment to improve
it, then upshifts become sloppy. I have yet to find a happy medium where all shifts are
clean.
He mentioned that because the frame & chain line were built for 7 speed, maybe the broader
spread of 8 speed is creating the problem. Another point you should know is that I'm
running 53-39 & 13-26. I also don't cross-chain (53-26, or 39-13).
He's willing to help try to help adjust it but he lives 30 miles away & I should be able to
handle it.
Any ideas? Thanks!
Ray
|
2256.33 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Rich Whalen | Thu Apr 20 1995 15:48 | 13 |
| If you had to spread the rear triangle to get the new hub to fit, then it's
possible that the derailleur hanger isn't parallel to the plane of the cogs.
I have a frame that is spaced for 8 speed, but I'm running a 7 speed wheel in
it. Originally the wheel was spaced at 126, and the quick release pulled it all
together tight. Shifting was a bit sloppy though. When I got some spacers and
set the wheel up such that I no longer had to compress the rear triangle
shifting improved.
I have an old mountain bike that I spread from 122 to 126, but didn't re-align
the derailleur hanger - shifting is sloppy.
Rich
|
2256.34 | | RCOCER::EDWARDS | | Thu Apr 20 1995 16:53 | 4 |
| >>>If you had to spread the rear triangle to get the new hub to fit, then it's
possible that the derailleur hanger isn't parallel to the plane of the cogs.
Is there a way to fix this?
|
2256.35 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Apr 21 1995 07:26 | 5 |
| i vote with the previous noter on the spacers. that should solve the
problem. imho, any derrailleur to frame alignment problems would not
be the rule, but an exception.
Chip
|
2256.36 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Rich Whalen | Fri Apr 21 1995 09:46 | 7 |
| re .34
Take it to a good shop and ask for them to check the alignment. Of course they
may not want to touch the thing since "cold-setting" carbon fiber (most likely
with aluminum dropouts) isn't recommended.
Rich
|
2256.37 | | STOWOA::SWFULLER | | Fri Apr 21 1995 09:59 | 4 |
| I have a circa 1989 Kestrel, and put a 8 speed width wheel in last year
with no problem.
steve
|
2256.38 | I believe all 2100-2300 were spaced for 8 speed | EDWIN::HARVELL | | Fri Apr 21 1995 10:42 | 19 |
| What year is your 2100? I believe that they were all spaced for 8 speed.
We recently had this problem on my wife's Bridgestone RB1-8 with Ultegra.
I had just put on a new chain, cogset and sti shifters. When done I could
only get it to shift cleanly in one direction. The problem would happen on
the smallest cogs for the most part. As I have a dropout alignment guage and
a derailleur alignment guage I knew that those items were OK.
I did find out that there was some play in the freehub but swaping that out
with a new wheel made no difference. Likewise using my spare rear derailleur
and swaping shifters had no effect.
What I finally ended up doing was having her ride it for awhile and then
everything was fine. Just needed a little break in period.
Now as I recall for DuraAce the spacing is different than other 8 speeds. So
you should be using an DuraAce casette and a narrow chain as well.
Scott
|
2256.39 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Apr 21 1995 10:47 | 4 |
| I hate to admit it, but I have a Dura Ace spacer on my Campy set-up.
Eeeeeyuk!
Chip
|
2256.40 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Fri Apr 21 1995 11:53 | 3 |
| 1990 & 1991 2100's, 2300's were 7 speed.
ed
|
2256.41 | | EDWIN::HARVELL | | Fri Apr 21 1995 15:12 | 7 |
| The question is were they spaced for 8 speed even though they came with
7 speed?
Even though the whole rear triangle on those bikes is AL and should have no
problems being widened to accept an 8 speed hub.
Scott
|
2256.42 | | RCOCER::EDWARDS | | Fri Apr 21 1995 18:14 | 6 |
| The 8 spd. hub fits relatively easy (minor coaxing required).
I'll look at the derailler hanger position this weekend.
Thanks for all of the input.
Ray
|
2256.43 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Fri Apr 21 1995 19:20 | 3 |
| the 7 spd treks had 126 mm spacing (7 spd).
ed
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2256.44 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Fri Jan 03 1997 08:03 | 7 |
2256.45 | 8 and 9 speed spacing | KAOFS::W_VIERHOUT | win95, its everywhere: heellpp | Fri Jan 03 1997 09:00 | 11 |
2256.46 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Fri Jan 03 1997 09:19 | 8 |
2256.47 | | STARCH::brevet.shr.dec.com::WHALEN | Rich Whalen | Fri Jan 03 1997 12:48 | 9 |
2256.48 | wouldnt life expectancy depend on frame material? | EDSCLU::NICHOLS | | Fri Jan 03 1997 16:49 | 10 |
2256.49 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Mon Jan 06 1997 06:05 | 3
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