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#1
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you
push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. |
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#2
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
On May 4, 11:48*pm, yirgster wrote:
A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. I hope you were stuck in a 53/14 with no hills. Phil H |
#3
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
On 05/05/2011 07:48, yirgster wrote:
A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. I've bust two campag shift levers so far. |
#4
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
On May 5, 6:50*am, Clive George wrote:
On 05/05/2011 07:48, yirgster wrote: A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. I've bust two campag shift levers so far. But you have been able to repair them, right?! Good Luck! |
#5
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
Dumbass,
You'll never ride in any grand tour or one day classic. |
#6
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
In rec.bicycles.tech yirgster wrote:
A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. Had a shiny new Shimano MTB brake lever snap off on me - a brake lever! No torsion on that, just weak metal, bad design, or flaws. **** happens. |
#7
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
On May 5, 1:48*am, yirgster wrote:
A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. Which model year? They switched to magnesium last year which may have contributed to gimpiness. I'd contact Sram and see if you can warranty the levers. |
#8
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
On Thu, 5 May 2011 14:10:07 -0700 (PDT), landotter
wrote: On May 5, 1:48*am, yirgster wrote: A few weeks ago my sram force shift lever (the actual paddle that you push) broke off on the right shifter. 30 miles to go. Looking around in the forums, I'm not alone. Maybe an extra 10 grams or so would have helped. About 3000-4000 miles. Which model year? They switched to magnesium last year which may have contributed to gimpiness. I'd contact Sram and see if you can warranty the levers. I haven't had any SRAM parts break, but I've wanted spares, and had an awful time getting them. They are very generous with exploded diagrams and part numbers, but the actual pieces are next to impossible to obtain. Some European bike shops list a few for sale, but if you try to order them, they turn out to actually not be in stock. I did once ask a LBS to order axle nuts and a click box for a SRAM DualDrive hub. The manager had to go through a ton of red tape to get them. After over six months of runarounds, he finally got the order - 2 sets of nuts (weird size: 10.5 x 1) and washers and 2 click boxes. When I asked how much, he replied, "No charge; warranteed items." Can't beat the price, but SRAM's policy is discouraging. Apparently, they would rather you just swap out a $250 component when the problem is just one piece worth only a few bucks. For most of their customers, this isn't a problem. Most of them won't put more than a few hundred miles on their bikes in a lifetime, so nothing breaks. For anyone who rides a lot, though, it can be a real irritation. I guess the days are long gone since you could get hold of all sorts of spares. Once upon a time, many manufacturers were at the ready with every little piece one way or another. Nowadays, when when we in the West manufacture so little, and use the dustbin rather than repair anything, this is to be expected. Fairly often I've found myself in the home of someone who doesn't even have a screwdriver or pair of pliers. If no one fixes anything, why bother with parts? Last month, I was on a lunch break in the middle of a ride. Outside the diner where I was sitting, there was a long line of patrons at a table in front of a housewares store. I wondered what was in such demand that so many were turning out. Then I saw the banner advertising the deal: bring in you chef's knife for a free sharpening! These people couldn't even sharpen a kitchen knife! Not a few, but they were showing up in droves! What the store was offering seemed like a sign of the times. Would this have been a draw 50 years ago? Probably not. What will be next? A shoe store offering to tie shoelaces for free? We're becoming helpless. Last year, on a club ride, someone's chain broke. No problem, maybe; I had an extra 9-speed master link with me. I asked the rider how many rear cogs she had. She didn't know. Probably couldn't sharpen a knife, either. (She had nine cogs; the chain was fixed.) You very well may get the same "warranteed item" policy on your brifter, in which case you're set, though with another brittle paddle. The way those things tend to be riveted and crimped together, it probably couldn't be remedied with a replacement part, anyway. Still, you have to wonder just how much it would set SRAM back to keep a room stocked with spares, for the few remaining who do have a few tools around the house, and know how to use them. I reckon if they did, the payback in their reputation would give them such a competetive edge, it would be well worth it. But I've got to stop thinking that way; that's SO twentieth century. |
#9
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why I'll never ride sram in any grand tour or one day classic
"Snortley" wrote in message ... Last month, I was on a lunch break in the middle of a ride. Outside the diner where I was sitting, there was a long line of patrons at a table in front of a housewares store. I wondered what was in such demand that so many were turning out. Then I saw the banner advertising the deal: bring in you chef's knife for a free sharpening! These people couldn't even sharpen a kitchen knife! Not a few, but they were showing up in droves! What the store was offering seemed like a sign of the times. Would this have been a draw 50 years ago? Fifty years ago there was an old guy on a pedal powered thingawachit who rode through the neighborhood ringing a bell. He sharpened knives. And scissors! The sign was real big about the scissors but knives were his core business. Not only was it a draw, but a big enough of one to be worth delivering. |
#10
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why I'll never ride SRAM in any grand tour or one day classic
On 5/5/2011 8:12 PM, Snortley wrote:
[...] Last month, I was on a lunch break in the middle of a ride. Outside the diner where I was sitting, there was a long line of patrons at a table in front of a housewares store. I wondered what was in such demand that so many were turning out. Then I saw the banner advertising the deal: bring in you chef's knife for a free sharpening! These people couldn't even sharpen a kitchen knife! Not a few, but they were showing up in droves! What the store was offering seemed like a sign of the times. Would this have been a draw 50 years ago? Think of the hundreds of people milling around with now sharpened kitchen knives! Probably not. What will be next? A shoe store offering to tie shoelaces for free? We're becoming helpless. Last year, on a club ride, someone's chain broke. No problem, maybe; I had an extra 9-speed master link with me. I asked the rider how many rear cogs she had. She didn't know. Probably couldn't sharpen a knife, either. (She had nine cogs; the chain was fixed.) With 5 through 8-speed chain, one could remove the broken link and reconnect the chain with a chain tool. With 9 through 11-speed chain, one needs a special stupid pin (Shimano) or a quick-link (all). -- Tºm Shermªn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
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