Michael
I was thinking the
other day, it is remarkable in this day and age when we can pretend to put a
man on the moon, we can’t get derailleurs to shift just right.
:-)
If it is the rear
derailleur ghost shifting, it may be that the shifter isn’t tightened enough. Or
there is too much extraneous friction between the shifter and derailleur, but
with downtube shifter that shouldn’t be hard to clean up.
If it is the front derailleur, with silver shifters it will shift onto the smaller chainwheel if you stand and grind up a hill. Get a shimano-7700, it has a spring to prevent that from happening.
Embarrassingly, I have an absolutely awful time getting precise shifting with my Gran Compe shifter/LX SGS RD/Shimano 12-36t 9-speed cassette combo. Almost every time I stand up, I get the sickening crunch type downshift. I have non-ratcheting Shimano 600 friction shifters/Deore SGS RD on my other bike and I never ever ever ever get the same thing. My ears can't really do their job since the city is so loud, so I do a lot of the old look-between-my-legs move when riding the bike with the ratcheting shifters. I'll put it down to technique, but I'm baffled by it and don't know what to do to improve it.
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I find it amazing that you wear out 11T sprockets. I have 13T sprockets
I've been using (on 12-27 --> 13-30 9 speed conversions) that I've been
using since 2005 that are still fine. I'm amazed your 11s get any wear
at all, since (as already noted) 11 x anything is so high as to be
absolutely useless on anything but a small-wheeler. You aren't spending
a lot of time in the 11x30, are you?
In Vt, there is a lot of rolling terrain. Riding on this is a lot like skiing mogels; it's best to be aggressive. A lot of downhill speed can help power one over the next roller. Even my wife, who is vertically challenged and has a fear of heights hasn't gotten tuned into hi speed downhills as the easy answer to the next up hill. That's why I describe the 12/48 as a launch gear. Most useful at the very top and bottom of hills. I spend little, but very productive time, in my 11/44 or 12/48 gear.
I'm sort of fascinated with the level of precision you expect from an ancient and obsolete system of tightening of a cable, and from the human hand after hours of riding. And all this on a system with narrow spacing and thining sprockets. If I was using friction shifting of any kind, I'd be reaching to tighten up the D ring every time I stood up to pedal.
It would drive me bonkers speculating what else could be hampering my shifting, there are so many variables. I would first have to convince myself the derailler was up to the job, then study the cable routing and stops also being sure the cables inside your Ferrells are cut and ground cleanly to eliminate any chance of movement. Frayed or broken wire strands? Got some kind of guide for the cables over the bottom bracket?
It might be enough to convince me to go back to five speed cassettes.
My last cable shifting derailler bike was Campy Chorus, so I've already gone over to the dark side. But, considering what my expectations would be comparing that with the old way, I'm afraid I'd be disappointed too much of the time with friction.
Keep up the fight, and be comfortable with whatever you ride with.
Phil B
The "commercial fate" of 7 speed is the chrome cassettes are now
unavailable, but the black ones are all still available. Not so pretty,
but functionally just as good. That's not the case with 8: in the past
2 or 3 years virtually all the 8 speed combinations have gone. Only
11-x are still in available, and for me 11 only makes sense if you have
a 20" wheel.
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I use a 10speed cassette and I have trouble with ghost shifting in gears 2-5.I basically use 1, somewhere in the middle of the casette, and then 10.