08-30-2010, 08:04 AM
Heck, I'm probably more of a math nerd than a serious bicyclist, but whatever. I happened across, and downloaded, an Excel spreadsheet that allows one to enter one's tire size and calculates gear inches based on that size. I proceeded to highlight all my gear ratios by coloring the cells bright green, and then happened upon the idea of an "ideal" drivetrain while looking at other cells in the sheet.
I came up with this, and I'd like to hear what y'all think:
Chainwheels -- 44/34/24
10-speed cassette -- 11/13/14/16/18/21/24/27/30/34
For those familiar with gear inches, this gives a range of 20 (in the 24 front/34 rear combination) to 113 (in the 44/11 combination) for my bike, with 700x45 tires. Furthermore, most of the ratios are pretty close to being 12% different from the adjacent one, which avoids a lot of huge jumps from one gear to the next. (My current bike has a couple 25%+ jumps when using a reasonable shifting pattern.)
The following shift pattern in this "dream" drivetrain only skips one 12%-ish ratio jump on the way up: (front number/rear number)
1/1, shift only the rear up to 1/5
Double shift from 1/5 to 2/4
Shift only the rear from 2/4 to 2/8
Double shift from 2/8 to 3/7
3/7 up to 3/10
The only place there is a greater than 12% jump is the double shift from 1/5 to 2/4, where the ratio jumps about 25%. With a two-gear right-hand shift here, going from 1/5 into 2/3, the 12% jumps are preserved, albeit at the expense of having to execute a more complex shift.
I came up with this, and I'd like to hear what y'all think:
Chainwheels -- 44/34/24
10-speed cassette -- 11/13/14/16/18/21/24/27/30/34
For those familiar with gear inches, this gives a range of 20 (in the 24 front/34 rear combination) to 113 (in the 44/11 combination) for my bike, with 700x45 tires. Furthermore, most of the ratios are pretty close to being 12% different from the adjacent one, which avoids a lot of huge jumps from one gear to the next. (My current bike has a couple 25%+ jumps when using a reasonable shifting pattern.)
The following shift pattern in this "dream" drivetrain only skips one 12%-ish ratio jump on the way up: (front number/rear number)
1/1, shift only the rear up to 1/5
Double shift from 1/5 to 2/4
Shift only the rear from 2/4 to 2/8
Double shift from 2/8 to 3/7
3/7 up to 3/10
The only place there is a greater than 12% jump is the double shift from 1/5 to 2/4, where the ratio jumps about 25%. With a two-gear right-hand shift here, going from 1/5 into 2/3, the 12% jumps are preserved, albeit at the expense of having to execute a more complex shift.