Similar, if not the same overall gear range but lots more tiny little steps in-between. Good luck.i got 22 gears soon to be 24
Similar, if not the same overall gear range but lots more tiny little steps in-between. Good luck.i got 22 gears soon to be 24
No you haven't.i got 22 gears soon to be 24
Be honest tho.. I understand the double front but you need the dongle to make the bigger ring of any use, but a 12 speed cassette? What will you gain? Is it just that, Like me, you want to have the latest kit?i have 15t and 18t at the front 2 is better than one tho have to change buy hand.
the price is the same as i have now to replace the cassette and also my mech has had a fair few bashes and seems to suck everything up like a hoover so will see if the gx mech is any different.Be honest tho.. I understand the double front but you need the dongle to make the bigger ring of any use, but a 12 speed cassette? What will you gain? Is it just that, Like me, you want to have the latest kit?
My gear comparator only goes to 10 sprockets, but I've used that on a typical 10 to 50 teeth 12 speed cassette using only the 10 to 36 teeth 10 sprockets. The front rings I've made 16 and 18 teeth and used a 700c for the gear inches.i have 15t and 18t at the front 2 is better than one tho have to change buy hand.
Yes but he could use 4 of them twice...My gear comparator only goes to 10 sprockets, but I've used that on a typical 10 to 50 teeth 12 speed cassette using only the 10 to 36 teeth 10 sprockets. The front rings I've made 16 and 18 teeth and used a 700c for the gear inches.
As you can check below, four of the pairings between using the 16 and the 18 tooth front are identical.
So instead of 20 gears there are only 16:
View attachment 23952
I nearly added a hub gear bike, as a bike that could easily be an exception to chain longevity on a crank drive bike for the reasons you mention. But if you want to go off road and can't or decide not to extend yourself to a 14 speed Rohlof hub then its a cassette and a chain.Yes, my bike is a crank drive to an 8 speed Shimano Alfine hub gear. I think this is the ideal setup for an ebike. The hub gear has done about 30000 miles without a single service. The chain, being nice chunky 1/8, not flimsy 10 or 11 speed stuff, lasts about 7000 miles, maybe longer and is cheap. Same regarding the sprockets.
I’ve had this bike for 10 years and it still rides beautifully. In the time I’ve owned my bike, I’ve seen ebikes become less reliable and more expensive to maintain. This is mainly due to motors becoming unnecessarily powerful and breaking components and the number of gears becoming unnecessarily high, resulting in the use of chain which is unsuitable for ebike use. Most of this is evident in the posts made within this thread.
I've not heard much about the 11 speed hub, but suspected that it might be weaker than the 8 speed.I had an Alfine 11 on an unpowered MTB and it was useless. The lowest gear was far too high, no way of lowering it enough to make it useable and it was always problematic so why this was sold as an MTB is anybody's guess. I did consider motorising this bike but decided it would only make things worse.. It would seem that the older Alfine 8 is a more robust gearbox..
Similar problem, simple solution,I had an Alfine 11 on an unpowered MTB and it was useless. The lowest gear was far too high, no way of lowering it enough to make it useable
The Alfine was designed for road use,never intended for MTBing.I had an Alfine 11 on an unpowered MTB and it was useless. The lowest gear was far too high, no way of lowering it enough to make it useable and it was always problematic so why this was sold as an MTB is anybody's guess. I did consider motorising this bike but decided it would only make things worse.. It would seem that the older Alfine 8 is a more robust gearbox..
Not designed for, but with it taking 130 nM torque the Rohloff is more than adequate. Quite frankly the Nexus/Alfine 8s don't have enough range to be useful on anything but rolling hills and if you gear them low enough for mountains they are outside the torque limit...The Alfine was designed for road use,never intended for MTBing.
I don't think any of the IGH were designed to be driven by electric motor. Because some are more over engineered than others they get away with it.
Mine has a hub motor.A hub-motor will sort all that. No need to go for complicated expensive solutions, which will certainly bring new problems.
My 8 speed works extremely well over very varied terrain and has an ample range of ratios. The problem seems to be with the newer 11 speed hubs and the newer motors.Not designed for, but with it taking 130 nM torque the Rohloff is more than adequate. Quite frankly the Nexus/Alfine 8s don't have enough range to be useful on anything but rolling hills and if you gear them low enough for mountains they are outside the torque limit...
Try doing what I do then. Buy the cheapest chain. Don't clean it, but give it a squirt of gear oil every time it starts making grinding noises. My chains last about 5000 miles. I wore one chainwheel at the same mileage, but it was well-used when I installed it, so it might have done a huge mileage. I've never worn any cassettes yet.Mine has a hub motor.