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Nashbar Cassettes?



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 30th 05, 06:24 PM
JBAFromNY
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

As part of a quest to upgrade a bike on the cheap, I've noticed that
Nashbar's house brand cassettes are cheaper than Shimano, SRAM, and
Campy, and come in a cog combination I can use. Are they any good?
Will spending a bit more on Shimano get me noticeably better shifting
and/or durability?

TIA,
John

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  #2  
Old August 31st 05, 05:08 AM
Hank Wirtz
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

"JBAFromNY" wrote in news:1125422675.023311.18900
@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:

As part of a quest to upgrade a bike on the cheap, I've noticed that
Nashbar's house brand cassettes are cheaper than Shimano, SRAM, and
Campy, and come in a cog combination I can use. Are they any good?
Will spending a bit more on Shimano get me noticeably better shifting
and/or durability?

TIA,
John



I bought a 9-speed 11-34 Nashbar cassette for my spare dirt bike wheels
that I have slicks on. It's chromed, and noticeably heavier than the SRAM
11-32 that came with the bike. The chrome started flaking after about 200
miles, but the exposed metal underneath hasn't rusted and shifting is
unaffected.

It looks as cheap as it sells for, but it functions fine.
  #3  
Old August 31st 05, 07:37 AM
Ryan Cousineau
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

In article ,
Hank Wirtz wrote:

"JBAFromNY" wrote in news:1125422675.023311.18900
@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:

As part of a quest to upgrade a bike on the cheap, I've noticed that
Nashbar's house brand cassettes are cheaper than Shimano, SRAM, and
Campy, and come in a cog combination I can use. Are they any good?
Will spending a bit more on Shimano get me noticeably better shifting
and/or durability?

TIA,
John



I bought a 9-speed 11-34 Nashbar cassette for my spare dirt bike wheels
that I have slicks on. It's chromed, and noticeably heavier than the SRAM
11-32 that came with the bike. The chrome started flaking after about 200
miles, but the exposed metal underneath hasn't rusted and shifting is
unaffected.

It looks as cheap as it sells for, but it functions fine.


Hm. Chrome? I bet it's a house-branded Sunrace:

http://www.sunrace.com/productpage.a...gory=cassettes

I have one of these or something reasonably similar. It works.

--
Ryan Cousineau http://www.wiredcola.com/
"I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics
to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos
  #4  
Old August 31st 05, 07:53 AM
Hank Wirtz
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

Ryan Cousineau wrote in
:


Hm. Chrome? I bet it's a house-branded Sunrace:


You are 100% correct. The tip-off is the "MegaGear" sticker on the 34 -
Sunrace's goof on Shimano's MegaRange line.

  #5  
Old August 31st 05, 12:19 PM
Lars Lehtonen
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

According to JBAFromNY :
As part of a quest to upgrade a bike on the cheap, I've noticed that
Nashbar's house brand cassettes are cheaper than Shimano, SRAM, and
Campy, and come in a cog combination I can use. Are they any good?
Will spending a bit more on Shimano get me noticeably better shifting
and/or durability?


I use an 8-speed Nashbar cassette on my mountain bike and it shifts
wonderfully. It's heavy enough that I suspect it will be longer-lived
than a comparable Shimano part.

---
Lars Lehtonen
Los Angeles Bicycle Calendar: http://calendar.bikeboom.com
  #6  
Old August 31st 05, 02:42 PM
Peter Cole
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

Lars Lehtonen wrote:
According to JBAFromNY :

As part of a quest to upgrade a bike on the cheap, I've noticed that
Nashbar's house brand cassettes are cheaper than Shimano, SRAM, and
Campy, and come in a cog combination I can use. Are they any good?
Will spending a bit more on Shimano get me noticeably better shifting
and/or durability?



I use an 8-speed Nashbar cassette on my mountain bike and it shifts
wonderfully. It's heavy enough that I suspect it will be longer-lived
than a comparable Shimano part.


I used one of these for a while. Besides being much heavier (than SRAM)
it had a tendency to shed teeth. I think the SRAM cassettes are a better
value.
  #7  
Old September 1st 05, 03:31 AM
John Forrest Tomlinson
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 04:19:07 -0700, Lars Lehtonen
wrote:

I use an 8-speed Nashbar cassette on my mountain bike and it shifts
wonderfully. It's heavy enough that I suspect it will be longer-lived
than a comparable Shimano part.


Considering that the difference in weight between the two cassettes is
almost certainly due to less material toward teh center of the cogs,
or on the "spider" and not the steel teeth, I doubt that.

JT

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  #8  
Old September 1st 05, 09:32 AM
Lars Lehtonen
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Default Nashbar Cassettes?

According to John Forrest Tomlinson :
On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 04:19:07 -0700, Lars Lehtonen
wrote:

I use an 8-speed Nashbar cassette on my mountain bike and it shifts
wonderfully. It's heavy enough that I suspect it will be longer-lived
than a comparable Shimano part.


Considering that the difference in weight between the two cassettes is
almost certainly due to less material toward teh center of the cogs,
or on the "spider" and not the steel teeth, I doubt that.


Are you comparing the two of them right now, or is there just something
magic about the word "Shimano?"

--
Lars Lehtonen

 




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