Disc brakes and 1x drivetrains. These are the sort of things that belong on mountainbikes, are questionable on cross bikes, and should make an immediate trip to the rubbish bin when it comes to road bikes. Change for the sake of change; gimmickry masquerading as innovation. And to make matters worse, the appearance of 11-speed blocks has killed the last vestige of the complexity of our sport: block composition and size.

The question of gear choice was once one of the most critical decisions a Cyclist could make when tackling a course. In The Rider, Tim Krabé describes his gear choice and those of his competitors; throughout the book, he fixates upon which gear he is riding in. José Manuel Fuente used to use higher gears that the other climbers to intimidate them. Andy Hampsten famously rode only odd-numbered gears because obviously even-sized gears made his palms go sweaty.

Sean Kelly belabored his choice to use a 13-25 block versus a 12-23 for the 1989 World Championship Road Race. He knew he couldn’t climb as well as the other favorites and wanted a 25 to save his legs over the final climb. If, however, he managed to get over the hill, he would surely need the 12 in order to win the sprint. It was a classic catch-22; use a block that he could win the sprint with but get dropped on the climb, or get over the hill and lose the sprint. The race lay in the balance of a single tooth on a cog.

We used to build our blocks, not buy a complete cassette on ebay. The idea was to keep the gears as close together as possible with a straight block being the holy grail and the relative smallness of the biggest gear being a declaration of your status as Hardman. Every tooth beyond a 1 tooth jump was a sacrifice; every step beyond a 21 or 23 tooth cog was a silent admission of your sissiness as a Cyclist. The Pros today are riding 11-28 blocks on every kind of terrain, every day. Even at Paris-Roubaix, one of the only races flat enough to still require little more than a 19 even for us mortals.

Committing to nothing lower than a 19-tooth gear requires a suitcase of courage, poor planning, or both. And it looks tough as nails, that tight cluster of gears at the back wheel. Not like these big dinner plates we see riding around all over the place these days. You could serve a nice helping of Steak Frites on some of these modern blocks. Disgraceful. And while I’m not building my blocks anymore, I’m certainly still choosing a cassette for the terrain and plan to continue doing so until I’m pushing up daisies, thank you very much.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @frank

    @Oli

    13-18? You pussy, 12-17 all the way.

    Merckx didn’t ride a 12 until the very end of his career – possibly his last season? If they did that replica right, they’d have done a 13-18.

    You think Eddy drilled his own rings or asked Campy to do it ?? And love seeing his drilled out bars.

  • @TheVid

    A-merckx.  I rode a buddy’s fat bike with a 1×11 drivetrain last weekend before a relaxing 4 hour ride.  I don’t know which I was more self conscious about being seen with, the dinner plate that was the smallest cog, or the fact that it was a fat bike.

    This 1x thing is just a fucking nightmare. I saw a 42T cog on a cassette the other day. I became instantly ill. Even for a mountain bike, that's disgraceful.

    @sthilzy

    Looking forward to spinning this up one day!

    Yep, Letraset your own wheels!

    Pure sex. And loved those old Sun Tour blocks. So sad that company went out of business. The grace and passion of Campa at the price point of Shimano. The happiest I ever was as a kid was when I upgraded my steed to have Scott Drop-Ins, a Regal saddle, and Superbe Pro.

  • @piwakawaka

    11 speed 11-23, straight 11-19, + 21 and 23, comes with the mystical 18, and bring on disc brakes as well, they will improve road riding to the same degree as mountain biking. ( broken 2 dura-ace blocks so far).

    You had me, then you lost me, then you had me again.

    But that middle comment almost has you out of the club.

  • @Resty

    I think a road bike looks better with a corncob cassette and short cage derailleur. But to lessen the ‘difficulty’ of the high gearing, I make use of a triple up front.

    This is a joke, right?

    What you're saying is the equivalent of posting this to an OCD Therapy thread.

  • @piwakawaka

    11 speed 11-23, straight 11-19, + 21 and 23, comes with the mystical 18, and bring on disc brakes as well, they will improve road riding to the same degree as mountain biking. ( broken 2 dura-ace blocks so far).

    They improve road riding like a windshield sticker improves the performance of a Civic.

  • @mauibike

    @sthilzy

    I had the full Suntour Freewheel chart on the wall. I believe there were four different 16t cogs. The 16t and 15t cogs were always the center of any build. I swear to God, the weight of a complete FW was more than some frames these days. The front chainrings were always 53/42, although I did hear about some pussies from CO using 39t, back in the day. There was so much planning before race day. In addition, being a good shifter was such a huge tactical advantage in racing.

    Which is also why we resisted index or "click" shifting as we called it. You'd push the shifter it was like a giant spoiler alert to everyone in the group that you were planning to attack.

    In the Alps one year, I saw a bunch of guys riding around on 7 speed blocks that were half "mountain" and half "flat" - the first few gears were smallish, maybe topping out at 26 if they came that big, and the biggest gears were straight 12-13-14 or some such - with a MASSIVE jump in between. Sound familiar?

  • @Phillip Mercer

    I ride a 10 speed and on my 50mm aero wheels I run 11-25 while my light wheels have 12-28

    I am 10 speed around the house so I can change wheels between all bikes. (I'm now also mostly carbon so I don't also have to change rim blocks)

    I prefer the 12-25 for my daily riding in Seattle and have done OK with that on the mountain roads as well. I like that its just a little smoother and around here if I'm spinning out the 12 I'm going fast enough; I've hit over 100kmph so that's fine with me. I do a "climbing" cassette of a 13-26 which basically trades the 12 for the 26 and have a "flat" cassette of 11-23 which is so smooth it makes me want to ride it all the time.

  • @Resty

    I think a road bike looks better with a corncob cassette and short cage derailleur. But to lessen the ‘difficulty’ of the high gearing, I make use of a triple up front.

    You're also opening that bike up to possession by demons -- the triple is evil.

  • @OJ

    @piwakawaka

    11 speed 11-23, straight 11-19, + 21 and 23, comes with the mystical 18, and bring on disc brakes as well, they will improve road riding to the same degree as mountain biking. ( broken 2 dura-ace blocks so far).

    They improve road riding like a windshield sticker improves the performance of a Civic.

    Its a really oddly specific circumstance where discs give a clear advantage, otherwise they just look ugly as hell. Once the peloton unfortunately adopts this industry run change, I can't wait a rider is on the side of the road on a climb with a neutral service vehicle having to give more information that Campag or Shimano/SRAM gearing. What disc width? what size? and then watching them try and slot the new wheel in as the racer's chances disappear up the mountain...

  • @Phillip Mercer

    @Puffy

    @piwakawaka

    11 speed 11-23, straight 11-19, + 21 and 23, comes with the mystical 18, and bring on disc brakes as well, they will improve road riding to the same degree as mountain biking. ( broken 2 dura-ace blocks so far).

    In the name of decency – can we just agree that disc brakes look shit and have no place on road bikes?

    I think it was @Frank on another thread that posted a cartoon about a recumbent user banging on about their value, I feel the same way about discs. The people who go on about how they come in handy on long alpine descents in the wet I suspect will never face a long alpine descent in the wet…

    Fucking class. +1 badge to you.

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