Posted by: Endur-Bro
Posted by: velocipedestrian
Posted by: XXX_er
someone tell me what component from 15 yrs ago worked better ?
The 20mm axle.
This.
Also QR20
Shimano brakes pre-servo wave?
Posted by: Endur-Bro
Posted by: velocipedestrian
Posted by: XXX_er
someone tell me what component from 15 yrs ago worked better ?
The 20mm axle.
This.
Also QR20
Shimano brakes pre-servo wave?
Posted by: Endur-Bro
Posted by: velocipedestrian
Posted by: XXX_er
someone tell me what component from 15 yrs ago worked better ?
The 20mm axle.
This.
Also QR20
QR20 - really? I do miss 20mm axle. We never should have gone 15mm.
i'm not sure if these were definitively better than the current crop of trail / dh clipless pedals, but for a product of that era, they'd probably still be viable today. the rotating spd bit allowed for a nice snug shoe to platform interface (that lots of the current non-articulated modern pedals lack), and like all shimano pedals, were bombproof.
Posted by: velocipedestrian
Shimano brakes pre-servo wave?
Servo wave has been around since the v-brake days
So if you were riding a new bike and then a 15 -20 yr old bike you would totally notice the smooth crisp feel of a 20 mm axle ?
Is a 20mm axle big in the same way as 29" wheels, or a dropper seat post
Posted by: XXX_er
So if you were riding a new bike and then a 15 -20 yr old bike you would totally notice the smooth crisp feel of a 20 mm axle ?
Is a 20mm axle big in the same way as 29" wheels, or a dropper seat post
I can't recall ever thinking "dam, I would be so much faster if only I had a 20mm axle" ;<)
Posted by: xy9ine
i'm not sure if these were definitively better than the current crop of trail / dh clipless pedals, but for a product of that era, they'd probably still be viable today. the rotating spd bit allowed for a nice snug shoe to platform interface (that lots of the current non-articulated modern pedals lack), and like all shimano pedals, were bombproof.
I still use a pair of these to this day! They are starting to wear out now but still work!
I think they ^^ were pretty heavy but SPD always work IME,
I got 3 pair in rotation some going back to the last century
where they are VERY shitty is at around zero in snow ...swap in some flats
Those pedals are legendary, I have a pair that I keep installing on bikes.
Then I take em off when I find some modern XT’s, which are superior in every facet but durability.
**Posted by: XXX_er
**where they are VERY shitty is at around zero in snow ...swap in some flats
I dunno, I used the same 10+ year old pair year round in Edmonton in -45, 8+ hours a day in the snow for 2 years straight with no real issues, a combination of walking and riding.
I also have them on multiple bikes that have been used year round in the snow in Van, Kelowna, Victoria, snow mountain biking, road riding, I've never had any problems at all. Sure you have to tap your cleats on your pedals to clear the snow but that's something you contend with on any clipless platform.
Posted by: skooks
Posted by: XXX_er
So if you were riding a new bike and then a 15 -20 yr old bike you would totally notice the smooth crisp feel of a 20 mm axle ?
Is a 20mm axle big in the same way as 29" wheels, or a dropper seat post
I can't recall ever thinking "dam, I would be so much faster if only I had a 20mm axle" ;<)
That's not the point. We had a widely-accepted super functional standard in 20mm that would have worked just fine for everyone but for some reason the XC people ostensibly needed their own standard and now there's a whole other thing that didn't carry forward i.e. if you had fancy hubs or whatever. It was one of many super unnecessary standard changes we could 100% have done without.
Posted by: craw
QR20 - really? I do miss 20mm axle. We never should have gone 15mm.
Thats just it.
160mm 26" Lyric = Maxle 20, 160mm 26" 36 = QR20 (or whatever FAUX called it, 3 QR system)
I have two 29er 36 Factory forks; 1 RC2 150mm with 15/20 Pinch bolt system and a Grip2 170mm with a 15mm Kabolt LOL
Pretty funny that the SC 160-180mm forks of today are running smaller axles than a decade ago. And what people are riding on these forks is flat out insane!
Maybe 38 forks became big for exactly that reason, 15mm axle.
I remember revalation with 20mm axle was much less of a noodle then the other 32 forks.
YMMV but I experinace atempting to clip inot a lump of ice
Posted by: thaaad
**Posted by: XXX_er
**where they are VERY shitty is at around zero in snow ...swap in some flats
I dunno, I used the same 10+ year old pair year round in Edmonton in -45, 8+ hours a day in the snow for 2 years straight with no real issues, a combination of walking and riding.
I also have them on multiple bikes that have been used year round in the snow in Van, Kelowna, Victoria, snow mountain biking, road riding, I've never had any problems at all. Sure you have to tap your cleats on your pedals to clear the snow but that's something you contend with on any clipless platform.
at around zero in PG I was constantly atempting to clip into a lump of ice, while the guy with crank brothers was doing ok, any body with flats was fine
I am a pretty big SPD fanboi so I think it was a matter of it being the exact wrong temp for SPD's
Posted by: XXX_er
at around zero in PG I was constantly atempting to clip into a lump of ice, while the guy with crank brothers was doing ok, any body with flats was fine
I am a pretty big SPD fanboi so I think it was a matter of it being the exact wrong temp for SPD's
For sure, I'm not trying to be argumentative or anything so sorry if I came across that way I just had quite a different experience I guessa anecdotal experience and all that :)
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