Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11.
I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote:
I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Friday, March 10, 2017 at 5:55:05 PM UTC-5, AMuzi wrote:
On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 Dremel is your friend because a few quick light passes of the oversize cable head over a Dremel sanding drum will reduce the head in size so that it fits perfectly in the shifter without binding. I've been doing that with my 9-speed Mirage Ergos since about 2003 with no problems at all. Cheers |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:55:00 -0600, AMuzi wrote:
On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. "Fatal" You kill the shifter? The cable? The stupid customer? :-) -- Cheers, John B. |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On 3/10/2017 6:41 PM, John B. wrote:
On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:55:00 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. "Fatal" You kill the shifter? The cable? The stupid customer? :-) -- Cheers, John B. Guys bring in drilled/crushed/macerated Campagnolo 1013 levers with cable stumps in the remains. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 19:38:51 -0600, AMuzi wrote:
On 3/10/2017 6:41 PM, John B. wrote: On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:55:00 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. "Fatal" You kill the shifter? The cable? The stupid customer? :-) -- Cheers, John B. Guys bring in drilled/crushed/macerated Campagnolo 1013 levers with cable stumps in the remains. As opposed to clapping your hands with glee and saying, "Yes Sir! Here we have the newest, upgraded, shifter, that is guaranteed to be totally idiot proof. Just pass your credit card here for a moment" :-) A notion apparently first mentioned in print by Thomas Tusser in "Five Hundreth Pointes of Good Husbandrie", in 1573, the precise wording of the expression comes just a little later, in Dr. John Bridges' Defence of the Government of the Church of England, 1587: "If they pay a penie or two pence more for the reddinesse of them..let them looke to that, a foole and his money is soone parted." -- Cheers, John B. |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On 3/10/2017 5:55 PM, AMuzi wrote:
On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. Lack of standardization on such simple things often astounds me. It shouldn't, because it's so common. But it still astounds me. -- - Frank Krygowski |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Friday, March 10, 2017 at 6:27:53 PM UTC-8, John B. wrote:
On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 19:38:51 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 6:41 PM, John B. wrote: On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:55:00 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. [1] Big head wires in classic era downtube shifters are even harder to remove, an often fatal exercise. "Fatal" You kill the shifter? The cable? The stupid customer? :-) -- Cheers, John B. Guys bring in drilled/crushed/macerated Campagnolo 1013 levers with cable stumps in the remains. As opposed to clapping your hands with glee and saying, "Yes Sir! Here we have the newest, upgraded, shifter, that is guaranteed to be totally idiot proof. Just pass your credit card here for a moment" :-) A notion apparently first mentioned in print by Thomas Tusser in "Five Hundreth Pointes of Good Husbandrie", in 1573, the precise wording of the expression comes just a little later, in Dr. John Bridges' Defence of the Government of the Church of England, 1587: "If they pay a penie or two pence more for the reddinesse of them..let them looke to that, a foole and his money is soone parted." Had he forgone the purple prose, his books might have been twenty percent shorter in print. |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Friday, March 10, 2017 at 9:35:48 PM UTC-5, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 3/10/2017 5:55 PM, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. Lack of standardization on such simple things often astounds me. It shouldn't, because it's so common. But it still astounds me. -- - Frank Krygowski Ah but the Campy button is the original standard. The other larger ones were introduce a fair bit later by other companies who do NOT want standardization of components or parts. Cheers |
Shifter cables 1.1mm vs 1.2mm
On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 21:35:43 -0500, Frank Krygowski
wrote: On 3/10/2017 5:55 PM, AMuzi wrote: On 3/10/2017 4:04 PM, ixiz wrote: I only recently found out that there were 2 diameters and about to buy a box (100). I hate to buy the wrong diameter - most of my bikes are campy 9 and 10 speeds and eventually 11. I am about to purchase a box and split with a friend but unsure which diameter to purchase. IS there any guides as to which cables are for what models or just get the 1.2mm and call it a day. Do not- and I cannot emphasize this strongly enough - DO NOT install not-Campagnolo wires into your Ergo shifters[1]. The gear wire heads of the classic era were small, as Campagnolo uses still. The revisionist modern larger gear wire heads (everybody else who makes gear systems) will go in, pop down inside the lever and only come out with extreme effort = time = $$$. Lack of standardization on such simple things often astounds me. It shouldn't, because it's so common. But it still astounds me. Why should it. Here is a very small group that cannot agree on the type of lights, chain lube, helmets, presidents, or practically anything else. Why should cable ends be different :-? -- Cheers, John B. |
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