blizzard wrote: ↑Mon Oct 14, 2024 2:23 pm
Mr Purple is talking about gear cables, which 3000km is still quite a short life. Although
I have never talked to anyone that manage to break cables, eat tyres and crack frames as often as he does, it's really quite an achievement.
Your TCR has wireless so no worry about replacing gear cables and hydraulic lines should practically last forever... Now changing headset bearings with full internal routing is a much harder job than when the hoses were external.
Oh, gear cables. OK then.
I fully agree!!
He must be bopping along to
Bat Out of Hell as he goes hurtling about...
Even in my now distance touring days, gear cables — for all the literal hidings and forced upshifts and foul weather that were part and parcel for the caper, were set-and-forget and often lasted well over 15+ years (I used teflon-shielded multistrand cables).
I have seen through-head routing on some bikes (DOGMA) and I do admit to it looking very neat — almost kind of an engineering marvel from a distance. I didn't even know the TCR has a headset (or where...
) ...well, at least not in the old-skool visual presence of the many bikes that came before it with conventional headsets!!
Maybe Mr Purple could be better served with a more robust frame than the at-first-glace slender and svelte TCR (eminently suitable for a skinny gossoon like me!). But first, how his previous frame happened to come undone... how, why, wherefore???