Is it possible to put an 11-40 cassette on Ultegra di2 (8150, medium cage)? Bike is a Fezzari Empre SL road endurance bike with Zipp 300s wheels (Shimano micro spline hubs). Chainrings are 50/34. Alternatively, can I put a 32T chainring in front? I'm 65 with a heart transplant and ride in REALLY high/steep Colorado mountains. Thanks.
Location: Jacksonville, FL, USA
I am out of my range of experience here since my touring bike is 52/38 up front, and a 7 speed 13 to 34 (13, 15, 18, 22, 26, 30, 34) cluster. Is it possible using a long cage (previous comment) on the rear derailleur to have a 42T large cog, and retain the same front ring setup? I've never had a problem shifting a front derailleur well beyond its rated maximum tooth differential (mine is rated for 10T max., but easily shifts 14T). You generally should be shifting (front or rear) without extreme loading on the chain regardless of whether or not you are within a derailleur's tooth differential range for smooth shifting. Manufacturer's specs are given as a general guidance for optimal performance, but not as limitation of the functional range (my old Campy short cage rear mech does 2 more teeth than it specs). I would experiment only by changing one item first and see how it works. Obviously your indexing must still match your rear cluster setup (10 speed?). If you haven't cycled with the gearing you are going to try how do you know it will be adequate? I would try the simplest and least expensive option first by staying with your original rear cluster and opting to use the 32T front ring and see how it feels and shifts for your needs. If front shifts okay, but you are still struggling with the low gear in the rear then increase the rear cog size and see if you can still shift okay, as well as being comfortable in that gear. If it doesn't shift well but you like the gearing then change to a long cage on the rear derailleur. Hopefully, you will be able to shift smoorhly front and rear, and be able to cycle using the gearing.
As previously mentioned, some professional help and advice might be a good option if you are not comfortable doing the work yourself. I would get a bike shop's opinion regardless and see what they have to say about it.
The differential for the rear derailleur is important because it correlates to the chain length. And if you exceed the difference, when you shift to the smaller ring, you're going to have chain tension issues.