Richard G wrote:So continuing on from my previous question on wheels... what's people's thoughts on 1x for bikepacking now?
I can definitely see the appeal for trail bikes, but I'm wondering if for bikepacking purposes the steps between gears might be just as important as the range available. Getting up hills is always a consideration for a loaded bike, but there's also the matter of finding a cadence that works well for you on the flats so you can just crank out those miles.
Have any of you 1x running people found yourselves worrying about which front ring to run, or that you suddenly go from 90rpm in one gear to more like 75rpm in the next?
(Yes, I appreciate I'm risking having the single speeders tell me to MTFU

)
Gosh, I nearly was going to post ssp related stuff...
For me, trail bikes = bikepacking bikes etc. I've been on 1x for 4 years now and felt 30t to 11-42t needed some consistency in the level of fitness for the climbs we have here in the Alps but would be large enough for fast rolling, low angle descents. Did that for a few years. Then came the Eagle...
The whole system is amazing. Due to the large 50t cog at the back (transformed granny...) I run 32t up front on all my geared trail bikes/bikepacking bikes. Every Eagle except for the new NX goes all the way down to 10t, which (works just as well as any 11t) makes a huge difference on flat descents to keep up speed. The range is so big, I wouldn't know why I would change the front ring. I ride a smaller ring on my fatbike which only gets ridden in snow, but all my bikes (except for ssp) have 32t. I don't ride road, but a colleague does and he also rides 1x and loves it on & off road.
sean_iow wrote:riding big miles so wearing out expensive 50t cassettes would come into consideration
The 10-50t cassettes are much more expensive, are still like new, whilst I'm smashing holes into my frames and rims... Usually I go through a chain in about 1000 km. The Eagle chains have seen more and still seem hardly stretched - can't measure a difference to new. This isn't just down to the chain, part of the longetivity also comes from the modified teeth of the whole system.
sean_iow wrote: just because it's one less shifter
Not just one shifter less, also less shifting. It does clean up your shifting and riding too.
On the first ride with an Eagle I remember feeling the gaps to be a bit big. They still are - that and the price are the only down sides.
chris n wrote:I'd want a range of 20 - 90" or so as a minimum. That is achievable on a 29er with 34T up front and an 11 speed 11-46 cassette so 1x would be OK
If an Eagle is 500 % (=20-100" range) 11-46 can't be minimum 20-90".
The calculator I use may be wrong, but I get 20.3 - 92.1" from a 34t to 11-50t on 28" rim with 2.4" tyres. (as in eg 11x Sunrace cassettes - cheap, but works)