I'm done with rim brakes now, show me the future!
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- čas přidán 7. 12. 2022
- I honestly think it is time that we stop complaining about the phase out of some old tech and instead put our energy into improving the future. The Road Bike Rim brake has had its day, let's kill it and move on. Then start demanding better from our disc brakes.
We need to stop collecting bottom bracket standards and get behind BSA, T47 and PF30. Decide on a freehub standard and go with it. The HG Hyperglide freehub body was everywhere once upon a time, but we need to move on. Can we kill XD and XDR and get fully behind MicroSpline?
While we are at it, can we just improve internal cable routing too?
#bikemechanic #roadbike #cyclingchat #avoidfootball - Sport
I get it! Keeping all that stock is killing business. The smaller ma and pop shops can't do it. The problem is as you pointed out, Cannondale is their worst enemy for example. New standards are created for the marketing department to work with. Manufacturers duel with their patents and royalties.
Tulio Campagnolo held back innovation in his time when they had an effective monopoly. The Japanese ended all that. The bicycle used to be such a simple machine. The UCI has as part of its mission to keep the bicycle looking like a bicycle with safe equal competition between athletes. It's not America's Cup between billionaires. At some point, where do we draw the line between business and sensibility?
Such a good post. Thank you!
I agree with David’s comment.
My thoughts was more closer the car manufacturer with tech, reversing sensors, lane control etc when people try these new tech they don’t want, then the prices of vehicles, stupid price, you can see the prices of new bikes as well, not good. The rim brakes issue maybe we are looking at wrong maybe wrong material for brake pads, I don’t know. I can see cycling going down the same route as cars, that includes ebike. Just my thoughts, but it opens up a good debate.
Total BS you just order the part from Junk and Bargains International JBI etc. 🙄 So don't believe this...
I am just soo triggered right now 😒. This is what happens at the shop when you have a part not available. The sales person looks on QBP or Junk and Bargins for the part. They order it then double the price. If you want it right away you pay for shipping if not you wait for the shops main order shipment and the shipping is free. If you live in a big city like Denver QBP delivers the product the same day. So this is not a problem. Shops can't keep everything on hand
@@jaredfontaine2002 sorry to trigger. But glad I inspired your insightful comment.
I like rim brakes and external cabling : it's very easy to maintain as I always try to do all the servicing myself. Sorry bike shops but I have seen too much of them working, I guess, "too fast", which I understand, but I spend too much time on my bike, I like the setup to be perfect, and if something is wrong it's my fault, I will do better next time, and I didn't pay for it anyway, you loose time for training, but you become a better mechanic, wich is skill that's valuable for my friends, colleagues, and family.
And for rim brakes they are quite cheaper, I also have small hands and appreciate small shifters.
I have Hydro DB on my MTB, I like them too, no worries about that, and I never thought "I would rather have V-brake on them".
I have completely abandonned the idea of converging technology for bikes, but we would need are standards, the BB is indeed a great exemple about that.
I guess everyone making a bit of everything is not that bad anyway.
Cheers
Top comment. Thanks for getting stuck in
Rim brakes are miles more forgiving than disc brakes. The bike is expected to suit the rider not the other way around. There are far too many bike riders where the cons easily outweigh the pros of disc brakes.
@@Mapdec I'm surprised you didn't have a go at manufacturers for putting disc brakes on kiddies bikes. Kids are not heavy enough, they don't ride fast enough and they are not allowed out riding in the pouring rain, why oh why would they ever need the superior braking power of disc brakes? Manufacturers not thinking things through is what is actually stifling innovation.
I use disc brakes for two decades now,but on my mtb!
On my race bike there’ll always be rim brakes.
They had a century to evolve and are at their prime now-I don’t have many mountains around where i live so disc brakes are pointless 🤷♂️
Thank you! He is getting paid by Specialized...
We already are where we want to be, at least some of us. The manufacturers need to stop fuking us with bs "tech" and planned obsolescence. Riding isn't about tech its about riding. And this is coming from a professional mechanic. And we are not all appreciating going wider.
You can run 28c or 30c easily with rim brakes, which is my sweet spot. I don't ride in the rain and I've never had a problem with compression less housing and Kool stop orange stopping me predictably at 50mph so eh. Disc brakes have gotten pretty easy to work on (Shimano at least)
@@senorspiegel In my experience disc brakes (mechanical or hydraulic) are not nearly as easy to work on as rim. Rim brakes don't squeal every time a bike owner touches the rotor, sweats on it, gets random chemicals on it. Maybe most aren't, but if you're a skilled rider rim brakes are good in wet.
@@jonnyoneplate well said. I am in Midwest USA.. I ride rim 404's in the worst weather no problemo. I had 2 Canyons with discs and the rubbed when climbing hard. And "ghost" shifted with SRAM 12. Sold em both. Bank to rim and mech Dura Ace
Spot on !! I couldn't agree more so much bs in the bike industry we are not all cash cows
Not sure if this is sarcasm or not. I’ve never had an issue with rim brakes or mechanical 10/11 speed. Don’t have to worry about charging/replacing batteries for shifting or bleeding brakes or paying through the nose for brake pads. Quick release is awesome for travelling with a bike too. I think early to mid 2010’s was the pinnacle of road bike design. Rider focused with practicality in mind.
Laughs in cable replacement and gear indexing.
@petef15 indexing is a peice of piss tbf. Takes 5 minutes and an Allen key
@phatmandon22 batteries are easy to charge and thru axles are easy to install and remove😂
@@veganpottertheveganbut sometimes a pain to remove or access the charging port. And bleeding can be a faf
@yohansharp3040 most frames aren't bad and really only first gen brifters had bleeding difficulties.
I am happy with were I am with rims and don't need cyclo-cross bike on the road
I use my cyclocross on the road. It's got slightly bigger tire clearance, a solid frame, and cantilever rim brakes which - when properly set - brake like a charm and have nothing to envy to disc brakes!
I enjoy the sound of disc brake pads constantly rubbing as if I need something else to slow me down. Disc brakes as of now are aggravating!!
Sounds like they need alignment checking Scott
Sounds like little sword fight on your wheels
I think the rim brakes on my road bike are the parts that i have the least issues with, if any. I actually doubled down on them and got me special lights that mount on rim-brakes only.
Yip, really bullet proof, but you should change it for disc brakes lol
So to stop my rims wearing out (which they never have), I just need a new frame, groupset and wheels? OK that sounds like a winning idea!
Exactly. Especially if you drive on flats like I do a lot in the Netherlands, rims are more than enough. Easy, lightweight, cheap, simple to repair and to troubleshoot. I currently also have a road disc bike and yes, I do see the advantages but really for riding in the Netherlands it's a waste of money. Those bikes costing €3000 with their 105 + discs aren't any better suited for that riding than a €500 ebay bike with rims, and that one will be faster too :)
Wow. I guess you guys don’t see that same kinda problems we do. Thanks for adding your comment to the chat.
@@Mapdec Thanks for replying! What problems exactly do you mean? For riding in a flat country like the Netherlands, my rim brake systemsix from 2008 offered everything I need. For me it is just great that I can go out and ride an excellent carbon frame that weighs under 9 kg for just €400. And when stuff breaks, I fixed it myself. Get some parts from the bike shop, and done. I moved to an area with more hills now and got myself a disc brake road bike, and I'm very happy with it. But I already had some of the typical issues with brake rub, and I know that if something really goes wrong with this system it will be much more difficult to repair. Still, it descends way more confidently than my old bike, so I'm happy with it. I wanted better braking, and I got it. But for the flats, in my opinion, it's not necessary. Might also just be because I'm a
@@Mapdec Ummm...if there are no problems why does one need bike repair....or people to affect repairs. LBS role is to repair, maintain and prevent issues not create them....
I'm in the trade and see more problems with modern bikes now than we ever saw before, much can be down to customer negligence or ignorance regarding care or maintenance.
Club riders rarely needed bike shops for regular maintenance, I'm still riding Campag equipment on Roberts bikes, my oldest bike is from the 80s, how many of todays bikes will be in use 40 years from now?
With the state of the environment, should we be encouraging disposable non recyclable bikes?
Even if cyclists could agree (and we can't), I don't think all of us getting behind something makes a bit of difference to the bike manufacturers. As far as rim brakes holding back wheel innovation, I don't see it. Most (all?) of the new wheels by the big names have completely written off rim brakes. I'm grateful that certain Chinese brands continue to bring out their new wheels with rim brake options.
Yes. It is getting harder to find carbon rim brakes now.
Brands may be scaling back development of rim wheels, but some of the last generation are realistically as good as they need to be. Campag/ Fulcrum and others still supporting rim options for now and they are top performing wheels, the latest brake tracks are fine- China direct brands will let you customise anything you need. The spectre of limited availability is atleast for now, a myth to encourage stodgy disc bike sales.
The bike makers could give a shite about what the customers want....what cyclist wants a $15k bike that is heavier and slower that a 10 yo $3k bike...
I've never worn out a set of alloy rims, and I've never owned a set of carbon rims. I guarantee you I enjoy cycling just as much as anyone with the latest carbon fiber deep section wheels, overly loud free hubs with a gajillion contact points, and invisible hydraulics and wires running all up and down their carbon frames. I suspect I enjoy it more because I'm not constantly chasing the tech. All I want is for good quality alloy rims and rim brake systems to still be made. I don't buy at all any argument that says if component makers keep making the older stuff then they have no money for R&D. That is, frankly and bluntly, BS.
@@nellyx1x493 Spot on! We don't want better and better alloy wheels; they're good enough now. We just don't want them to become impossible to buy.
I like the performance of road disc brakes, but the maintenance requirements and therefore costs are very high compared to rim brakes. I live in Switzerland and ride a lot of hills. I have found that pad and rotor life is shockingly low (1000km for pads and 2500km for rotors), not to mention the occasional brake bleeding requirements. Compare that with my rim brake road bike where my last set of pads pads lasted 20,000 km and the wheels lasted 30,000 km. that bike needs virtually no maintenance, the disc bike is far more needy. I would like to see the manufacturers concentrate on making longer lasting components!
exactly...
My bike riding experience would be far worse if I were stuck with disc brakes. I just don't need them. The expense, service cost, weight is enough alone to pass. Disc brakes would be trying to fix a problem that does not exist for me. My rim brakes never ever make a sound, need almost zero maintenance and cost a fraction to purchase and maintain. I put 8000 km on a new set of carbon rims last year and the pads are not used up yet and the brake track still looks like brand new. Never have I thought my braking performance was lacking. I need disc brakes because why???
I also don't think I'm an unusual case. You are suggesting your problems should be my problem... Good luck sorting your issues.
Such a good point. It does seem our steep and wet environment is causing us quite unique problems
well said Larry....when is the last time you had an issue with rim brakes....probably never
Actually I like my rim brakes fine. However I don't care if campagnola still make them or not, I just want to know that someone makes brake pads to fit and someone makes rims and hubs to fit. It is not asking much.
👍
In reality, mere mortal weekend warriors like myself will probably set faster times on (lighter) rim brake bikes. It's difficult to justify "upgrading" to Dura Ace 9200 when I don't require more braking power or an extra 20T high gear. A new disk brake bike is likely heavier, less dependable, and more difficult to maintain/fix.
@@cc-000 the aero benefits will be largely irrelevant on a 4 -5 hour ride, I'm not saying that aerodynamics can't have huge benefits given the ideal conditions or the right reason, but why is the marketing making out that it's a must have.
Deep section wheels are bloody awful in windy weather and a nuisance on club runs.
@@cc-000 no disc brake wheel does have better aerodinamcis than a rim brake wheel ,that is just bizzare marketing koolaid. One issue is front wheel asymmetry and other is disc rotor that is always designed to catch air
@@cc-000 absolute bollocks disc Brake bikes are heavy and as I’m not doing 30 mph all the time it makes no difference to me go to some hill climb races you can’t move for disc brake bikes not because they’re f@@king heavy
For me it came down to money. The disc version of my current bike was £700 more than the rim version.
That's a lot of coffee and cake
Yes, we should get behind the disk brakes. 😂 I live in Austria. Quite some big descends here. Never had any issues with rim breakes. They are lighter, more aero and are easy to fix.
You missed less efficient, which is the most important thing about braking .
Money. Cyclists with large incomes will flex with the latest gear. That’s cool to see. However, I love the simplicity of things that have always worked and cost very little to upkeep - like rim brakes on road bikes. The stock issue you mention, plus multiple molds, may be why the manufacturers stopped giving consumers a choice. Luckily I still have my rim brake, mechanical shifting bike and will save the discs for the dirt.
It’s a good point.
The rim brakes are great and external routing is awesome, easy to maintain inspect and adjust in couple of minutes.
Besides that they also whey less and have similar performance, except the bad weather conditions when most people ride on the trainer.
They come at a lower price, lower weight, shorter time of installation.
Disc brakes do not perform any better in bad weather conditions then good rim brake pads. This is just perpetuated marketing BS.
@@rosomak8244As someone who commutes in all weathers (latest ultegra calipers and alu rims), I'm afraid stopping power and reliability for the same lever squeeze is much lower than in my discs.
Being someone with hand injuries and small hands, discs have been a godsend.
@@rosomak8244 Mine work just fine in the rain, snow, etc.
I'll put up with discs offroad where they make a huge difference, but in my flat state rim brakes are more than enough and way easier to maintain for road.
To be losing the simplicity of rim brakes is a shame.
Why does a bicycle of all things need to be complicated.
@@orlandogodoy3233 to get more money from customers.
What is so complicated about disc brakes?
@@dogukantosun5547 bleeding them?
@@ozgurinsan It's not that hard once you learn how to do it. On the other hand, the length of the cable brakes changes with every temperature change, after a certain period of time, the length of the cable also gets longer and it is necessary to make adjustments. Once you adjust the disc brakes properly, they will not cause any trouble for a long time.
But if I spend a tremendous amount of money on bike today, will it be obsolete in 3 years? Not all of use want to buy an expensive new complete bike every few years just to keep up with technology that many of us don't actually need/want. I don't ride in the rain and don't have excessively long descents near me, so disc brakes are pointless for me, and I don't really miss having Di2 when I jump on my mechanical bike. I love the sport and ride about 20,000kms/yr , but I'm starting to turn to running now simply because the prices are so out of control.
You are right, prices are crazy. I’m the one fan of reduce product count, reduce handing, distribution costs, stop making useless landfill bits
A lot of the modern "upgrades" aren't really. Disc brakes are great for 32mm tires and above, can live without plush Di2 cell phone group sets although I'm sure they're nice, but the best advancement in road bike tech in my book over the last 19 years are Deep dish carbon wheels, a well worth it upgrade I'd recommend to anybody. I ride a 2009 bike with deep carbon rims and it performs just as well and better in some circumstances than my newer rigs, I still enjoy and actively ride both my old and new rigs. There are some great new bikes on the market, no doubt, snag one if you can, but deep dish carbon wheels and nice compact stiff frame geometry are pretty much future proof.
I absolutely love disc brakes but hate installing them. All my bikes are disc, but I'm building a rim brake bike because of the simplicity of it, the ease of working on it at home. The biggest downside with discs is all the extra steps.
Totally, but it has been getting better and better with every new product.
Absolutely, my most used bike is fully intergrated, looks amazing. Had an argument with it though when it came to service the headset and ended up taking it to a mechanic.
The smoothness of a 105 crank turning a threaded hambini bb. The balance of a single pivoting caliper squeezing flashpros onto a machined alloy rim. The reassurance of a svelte hooked tyre prized onto a ride. And the tangible visuals of a mechanical gear change. I think we have arrived with no batteries required mate 🤟
Poetry 😎
When we get rid of rim brakes we can really start innovating with some heavier less responsive more expensive wheelsets. Your video is a masterclass in sarcasm well done sir!
Do you or a loved one suffer from hearing loss due to squealing disc brakes?
You may be entitled for compensation!
😂😂😂
Rim brakes are lighter and more aerodynamic. For race bikes why would you want something slower?
Purely for the rim choice.
@@Mapdec I’m not sure that’s a good reason to make your race bike slower.
I see nothing wrong with rim brakes and alloy rims: functional and durable. Never wanted for braking power on a road bike, including in the wet on steep descents. Nor do the brake tracks wear too quickly. But why do we need three mount standards (nut, hidden bolt & direct mount)?
For racing machines & thus carbon wheels I can easily see the benefit of disc brakes to remove the brake track. And offroad.
I don't think the brifter bodies can get much smaller for hydraulic brakes: there is a certain amount of liquid required in the reservoir to enable the brake blocks to move.
As for mineral oil versus DOT 5.1, I'd like to see mineral oil go completely: no defined standard, with each manufacturer providing their own blends. DOT fluids are standardised and reasdily available due to the auto industry.
For BBs, it's not just shell standards but also axle standards. I'd be quite happy to see DUB & 30mm disappear. In a BSA sized shell, 24mm is far superior. Never had a problem with square tapers, bu have you seen the crazy amount of axle lengths plus the 2 taper standards that created?
Indeed, canary problems. For those of us who've been cycling for over half a century, and still do over a 100kms an outing, for some odd reason, 'super-duper-ultra-whammo-whoopee-do' rings just a little hollow.
If everyone got behind it it would definitely happen quicker which is a very good reason for me not to do it.
Don’t worry about that. Regardless of how quick or slow it is, in 5-10 years we won’t see rim brake bikes on anything but the low end marketplace bicycles anyway.
@@slowcyclist4324 We will also see rim brakes on very expensive custom bikes.
@@lovenottheworld5723 oh? So not only are rim brakes less capable, but also only found on more expensive custom bikes now?
Wow. You folks will do anything to prop up rim brakes even if it means eating your own words.
@@slowcyclist4324 A light weight steel fork with a lugged crown has to use a rim brake.
I believe you are mixing a lot of topics into one.
Rim v Disc brake is not about lever size. It might be about that for disc brake afficionados, because they were clunky in the beginning, of course.
But if you want a bigger brake lever body (rim or disc) and call that progress, well, bigger is always easy to manufacture.
We have too many hubs out there, yes. But take away all the rim brake ones, and there are still too many. The shelves are full with stuff, because as long as there is a market niche big enough to turn profit, that's how that works apparently.
My deeper point about rim v disc is - as long as disc brake systems are overall heavier, and they will be because physics, I as a consumer want to have a choice to ride what I prefer.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Great comment. I was thinking about how small and light disc levers might become based on how far that have come so far.
@@Mapdec I get your points, and I do like your technical approach.
But to say us consumers should ditch one system so "the brands" can develop something better is not how the market works, or innovation works. Innovation comes from competition, and while we will have competing systems and products clogging the shelves, I do not see any other way. Unless, Tyranny, of course, that system could totally pave the way 😛
Center lock is the better standart no doubt. But as long as the consumer buys bikes with 6-hole hubs....
As for brake tracks on carbon fibre composite rims, that can totally be a problem, and the braking on an alloy rim is heaps better, always.
As for rim width - as the air above the wheel is already turbulent by the top of the wheel turning into the wind at twice your groundspeed (because the lowest point of the wheel has ground speed of zero, obviously), even the V-brake system could be developped further, or built upon.
I am looking forward to the future, actually. But I really hope that no side ever has the power to say "this is better, everybody do this now" when there are still strong arguments to be made about the other systems ;-P
This got long winded, sorry!
With a lot of things you say, You speak out of my heart and I agree fully with You. But not regarding rim brakes. I bought one bike with Sram Force Discs, the bike was intended for foul weather, dirty roads etc. But it does not work! I had two brake cylinders with stuck pistons which could not be refurbished to work again. As Sram does not sell cylnders, I had to buy switch gear with brakes. Very expensive experience.
On the other hand I have DT Swiss Oxic wheels: No rim wear, very less brake pad wear, reasonable weight and super brake performance. Guess what my next bike will have ...
My rim brake road bike works perfectly fine
All those standards were driven by the change to first aluminium and then carbon as a frame and components material. The old standards are still optimal for steel frames with aluminium parts.
Let's look at the bottom bracket. The square taper standard works for commuters as well as sprinters. There are no alignment issues and the bearings are big enough. The whole system is easy to manufacture and therefore there are cheap options. It's not that hard to use different spindle lengths for different chainlines.
I just upgraded the sloppy Tektro rimbrakes on my trusty Cannondale with Shimano 105 dual pivot brakes. The brake cables on the bike are external, which makes for lower friction. I replaced the cables with smoothly polished jagwire "Pro" cables, for even less friction. Also, the curvy bit of the cables is made out of metal and compressionless, which makes the brakes feel very direct and strong. No squishy brake feeling here.
Braking is very good in all weather conditions, strong and easy to modulate. Can't see how it can get any better than that. A rimbrake setup is cheap, works very well when properly set up and maintained, is reliables, easy to service and best of all, it is LIGHTER. Compare bikes that are sold in both rim- and disck brake version and see that the disc brake version is at least 500-600 grams heavier. That is a lot.
The reason that we went to disc brakes , apart from marketing, is that we started using carbon wheelsets. That makes sense, rim brakes on carbon rims can be problematic. But the lighter weight of the carbon wheels is offset by the higher weight of the disc brakes. You win some, you lose some...
Those jagwire sets are so good. Fine choice.
I have rim ZIPP 404 and pound the shite out of em.
OMG! I had a bike that came with those Tektro brakes. They are absolutely horrible! I bought a pair of Ultegra dual caliper brakes from a dude off Craigslist. Just changing to those were night and day! I couldn't believe they put those on there. They are almost dangerous.
You'll be telling me you're spending Xmas with David Arthur next. The best brakes I have had on a bike were Hydraulic rims - the feel from those I couldn't get from a disc (especially off-road) without iritating lock-ups. I'm 60 so I'm not looking for balls-out performance - just choice.
Woah there!!!!
@evanjohn503 Hilarious comment …….what an opener. Chapeau 👏
As someone that really likes things that are functional and clean looking aesthetic I am torn.
All of the things you talked about in the video make sense but the beauty of the “bike world” is choice and opinion. I love learning about new specs and different aspects of different manufacturers. I certainly think that making standards would help bike shops a lot with tools and inventory for sure (having experience working in one).
I still like rim brakes for the ease of working on them and price point. I think that new low level hydro discs are worse than high level rim. I believe to keep the sport entry level in this economy rim brakes have to be apart of the lineup.
Great point. Thanks for sharing
Let’s say it would be possible to agree on a standard. Go back to 1990 and pick the dominant system of then. How would bikes look today?
I’ll tell you: no superior hub systems (because qr is the standard), no disc brakes, no hollow BB’s etc etc etc
I’m not a fan of the nr of variations in headsets, BB and all that, but asking for a standard while demanding progress does not work.
Rim brakes for me in the summer, maintenance so simple. Disc in the winter, maintenance simple, but long winded and can be noisy. I’ve managed to do internal cabling a couple of times now, but it brings my anxiety out before hand😁
To add to this - yes rim brake for lightweight summer bike, nothing more needed... but then for a proper Northern winter I'd still not go for a disc road bike and instead just go straight to a disc cross bike or gravel bike, as the tyres are then more appropriate for winter roads... there's no point in having really powerful brakes with skinny slicks on cold frosty slippery tarmac, most of the winter is so bad on my local roads that a 29er mtb is the right tool for job!
Luckily, square-taper BBs are still the latest and greatest for nice steel bicycles, when not using components from the big 3. It's just so nice to have one Standard, and you can easily get exact replacement parts for a >30 year old frame.
The only annoyance there is ISO vs. JIS, of course 😭
The reticence is coming as much from the fact that the shift to discs requires the purchase of the whole bike, a big money making/ profit enhancing trick that brands learnt from MTB in the last decade - so it cuts out the rider on a limited budget who was able to source carefully selected older gen components to make a competitive build. Progress is fine but pulling up the stepladder of participation is not and will ultimately damage the industry in our current economic dystopia which is disproportionately affecting the youngsters who will form the industry's future customer base- we're in the region where 4/5/6k just gets a relatively stodgy mid range build with 11spd, the progress of the new group sets may be great but the pricing is for dentists/ bankers. And yeah BB30/PF30 is the spawn of the devil himself, possibly the industry's worst invention, lots of otherwise perfectly good bikes ruined or short-lived by sloppy implementation ... and they know it.
They sure do… press fit really needs to die long before the rim brake does
To be honest the reason why I think that companies don't come together and make a universal standard is that it might draw some people away from a brand that they are currently using and lose a company money. I also love the rants that you post! We need more people like to to expose the BS in this sport and sort it out.
Thanks for highlighting all the issues with disk brakes I’ll stick with rim brakes.
Fair point Paul.
@@Mapdec To be fair I think you highlighted why so many want to stick with rim brakes, it's a mature technology that works very well. There's no room for the bike industry to make massive improvements to the rim brake so we are being moved onto a new technology (disk brakes) that needs a lot of development, which we are expected to fund by purchasing the new and improved versions. I will no doubt buy into hydraulic disks at some stage but I will wait until I think all the issues are ironed out. I guess it's difficult for the more seasoned cyclist to suck it up and start over again.
Home maintenance of rim brakes and external cables is just so much simpler. Clinging on to my rim brakes and alloy wheels as.lond as I can source the parts.
My problem with moving to disk brakes is I run a "grandfather's axe" road bike. I replace the transmission with one at the Chorus/Record level when it wears out. I did that last year, moving from 10 to 12 speed mechanical. I get a new frame every 10-15 years. I'm due one in the next year or so - can't afford good carbon so I'm looking at high end aluminium such as a Condor. Wheels are upgraded when finances allow. At no point could I get anything that would touch this for quality if I had to get a complete bike on the same budget. So like the legendary axe which has had the blade and handle replaced at different times over the years, it's never completely new.
Moving to disk brakes needs everything to be changed, and the result would be a less good bike for more money with very slightly better braking.
I have rim brakes they work fine for me
Don’t see why i have to buy a complete new bike if i want to change or upgrade my wheels if only disc compatible are available!!!
Aluminum rims with rim brakes are a winning combination. They work great up to 54 mm tyres. They allow for flexible forks which improve traction and comfort. That's the purpose-built no compromise high performance option.
It's essential to have disc brakes and carbon fibre rims and frames for your 10-mile Sunday bike ride, it increases enjoyment by 11.5%.
It’s funny, but layered with truth. Love it.
big spendeerrrr hahaha idiots
Carbon wheels for your recovery ride
@@Mapdec I think it boils down to budgets and needs. I try to brake as little as possible whilst trying to keep my rides as safe as possible. I'm very apprehensive about being bullied into having to buy new group sets and eventually bikes. I'm sure there are millions of us with 90's and early 2000's bikes that we just don't want to dump because Shimano or Sram have come up with something more efficient and ultimately more expensive. I'm based in Spain, in biggish town and getting deore lx cantilever brake pads is virtually impossible. Some bike shops suggested getting a new bike instead of new brake pads. Ultimately, if you are in your 30's, just get 10 of whatever components you need on ebay while they are still available and bob's your uncle, sorted for the rest of your life.
@@Mapdec Also, I really appreciate you replying to all comments! Good stuff, hope your business flourishes.
Be real: the motivation behind road-disk is liberation of the rim. Everyone wants deep, carbon rims primarily for aesthetic reasons, which is difficult (but not impossible) with rim-brake. The silver alloy braking track on a rim-brake wheel is the real enemy. The overall braking performance is certainly no better versus a quality rim-brake, with the disk-system being louder, heavier, less user-friendly and more problematic. Form > function alert ☝🏼
Lots of truth there. Defo the deep carbon rim as the big investment item that is destroyed quite quickly by rim brakes.
@@Mapdec In my experience.. I never wear the pads before the rim. I ride long hills and I use swisstop pads and rims with grooved brake track and breaking eats the pads but rims are nearly unaffected so far. After few thousand km track looks the same, grooves are nearly as deep as they were and I changed lots of pads.
I know that some cheper pads eat the rim a lot, but I stick to swisstop and I did not have any issues
@@Rafskat So do I ! 🤙
Let’s see you try and jam your brakes and come to a stop behind a car that pulls up in front of you to try and make a left turn.
I’d bet that on a rim brake you’d have skidded your face into the rear trunk window of the car, while on a disc brake you will likely be shaken, but completely fine with your front wheel inches from kissing the rear bumper.
Disc brakes and rim have never been about being able to “stop adequately”, it’s about how well you can stop in inadequate situations. Why do you think we use disc brakes in off road rides? We don’t have the luxury of time to gently come to a stop; it’s all about your ability to viciously shed speed while remaining in control, something which rim brakes fail completely at.
@@slowcyclist4324 wouldnt it comes down to individuals bike handling skills. The veteran bikers out there have control at either really slow and really fast speeds. The issue with average punters they think they are grand tour riders right 😂
I’m a cyclist based in SE Asia (Bangkok, Thailand). Having rim rakes & external cables means the technician doesn’t have to be as skilled to work on my bike when skills are lacking here. Plus finding brake pads is so simple compared to all the variations of disc pads on the market today.
The cable routing conversation really is a different topic.
As for BB’s I do prefer threaded but as you mentioned that could scuffle frame development.
I’ve been outta the bike shop business for over 10 years now, if I was to go back I’d definitely need a refresher course.
I'm also living in Thailand and prefer to do my own maintenance all my bikes are rim brakes steel and aluminum frames
Late comment but I'm still doing it!
Disc brake pads last weeks in the Swiss alps. They wear away on the 1200m descents very quickly. Rim brake pads last years. It's dry enough here that I can pretty much ride as much as I want without having to ever unpack my rain jacket so the one advantage of disc brakes is lost on me.
I'm not a pro rider with the time and money to replace the pads every few weeks so it's rim brakes every time.
I'm even selling my disc brake bike and have already replaced it with a rim brake dinosaur.
I fully agree with the fact that the explosion of "standards" in terms of hubs and BBs is dreadful. The former is a consequence of introducing a mountainbike technology to roadbikes with as little adaptation as possible. Direct mount rim brakes in my experience need less maintenance than a seat post. Disc brakes howerver are straight away the most service intensive component on a road / gravel / cx bike. I can't remember doing two rides in a row on my gravel bike without something annoying me about the state of my discs (Hope RX4 btw). A single bleeding session for those takes longer than all the service my rim brakes see in their entire lifetime. Yes I am sure that discs will be amazing in 10 years, but right now it is an unfinished product. Also, how ironic is it to invest hundreds of €/$/£ to save 2.5 W with ceramic bearings or 1.5 W with an OSPW when you ride arround with discs that are always rubbing after a descent or in the wet?
While I’m looking forward to new innovations in cycling, I believe for riders like me in majority of South East Asian countries, cost is still a concern and therefore many of us budget cyclist still cling onto old tech offerings in the market. I just spent GBP 300 for a second hand carbon road bike with 105 R5800 rim brake version groupset and to me that’s a significant upgrade from the hand me down aluminum Sora bike I had when I started back cycling during Covid. Using the analogy of golfing : I will start off with budget/second hand golf clubs and upgrade my drivers accordingly while pursuing a better handicap rating as time goes on. Will I be laughed at by the elitist? Most likely, but heck at least I’m out here doing my thing…
It’s not for me very happy on rim brakes, tubed 25mm tyres and Shimano cable shifters. When there’s a comfortable fast accelerating disc bike on 25mm tyres I’ll make the swap. I just find all the bikes on +28mm tyres dull to ride.
Hambini entered the chat
Yes, let's all get behind heavier, more expensive, harder to maintain, noisier brake technology that requires stiffer riding frames, wheels, and forks.🤣 I'll stick with my no nonsense, fully external, mechanical, rim brake on light alloy rims with 28s that I just get on and ride a big hill on every day with no issues 🙃
People keep saying that disc brake bikes ride stiffer. Can someone actually prove that to me. I had a 2013 Cannondale SuperSix and also have a newer disc brake SuperSix. The disc brake model does not ride more harsh than my old one. That is with similar depth carbon wheels. (The new one has slightly deeper wheels) and both running 25mm tires. Granted, you could make a case of it being a newer frame. But, it rides great.
@@DaveCM You can make a rim brake bike as stiff as a disc bike. But you can't make a disc bike as compliant as a rim brake bike that's designed for compliance. Disc fork and wheel has to be able to handle the torque of braking without shuddering, so that sets the floor for stiffness for disc bikes. Rim fork and wheels can be built much lighter and more compliant because braking force is transferred through the rim, not the spokes and fork legs.
@@DaveCM the forks would have too be stiffer to take the extra forces applied on such a small area the torsional pull from a disc must be quite significant.
Sorry, you're using 'OuTdAtEd TeCh' and what you describe is impossible, discs are the way forward!
>This comment was sponsored by a bike shop around you trying to sell more €3500 9kg bikes with 'modern' tech.
100%....I've a tcr sl disc for wet descents, everything else is the 2018 supersix. As a bike mechanic I see some horrendous takes in this video
I use my bikes mainly in dry anyway so rim has enough stopping power for me. In the dry Ultegra stops on a dime. Plus easier to maintain, less drag (what’s the point in a aero frame from marketing dept saying is 1% less drag then disc adds more than this on in drag) plus you can adjust them in a second, no annoying squealing sounds and the big one disc brake bikes are about 1 kilo heavier then the rim which if you do lots of climbs like me you want the lighter bike.
Fair enough, industry standardization would be welcome!
I bought a LOOK 795 Blade RS. I SPECIFICALLY chose a rim-brake mechanical groupset model. I was fully aware that it was a last-of-the-dinosaurs situation!!
I agree with you 100% on everything you said. I am 54 years old and so have seen a lot of changes over the past nearly 30 years. Road cyclists can be luddites. I remember well when the cassette started growing from the 5 cog cassettes. I would read magazines and people would write in complaining about it. "Eddie won five on five" was the mantra most regurgitated. For some reason, they thought that a five speed cassette was good enough for Merckx the it should be enough for everyone else. Of course that is ignoring that was what was available when Merckx was racing. If he had a 12 cog cassette available, I'm sure he would have used it. As for standardization, that is one thing I complain about. We used to be able to. mix and match, but that is long gone. I've lost track of the BB standards and the proper cranksets to go with them. I am hoping that a standard, or a couple of them at least, will surface as the "winner" and simplify things
Great comment. That’s for adding to the chat
Wrong comparison. The gearing available on the bicycle does have a direct impact on the basic riding conditions. The type of brake does not.
Powers meters and HTII bb's are good reliable new tech, not convinced fat tyres and disc brakes necessary on a road bike, I have them on my MTB where they make sense.
Discs suck for road bikes (and I have a disc brake road bike along with 3 rim break road bikes) one example, I want to service my headset or change the bearings, easy job with rim brakes, with discs its a major undertaking as my hydraulic hoses are routed through the forks and so a simple task has now become something else, same with cutting down my steerer tube if I drop my stem at any point, so enjoyable tasks for home mechanics who enjoy looking after their own bikes now becomes a major bind and/or a trip to the bike shop which in turn costs more money and time off the road. You also highlighted the extortionate price of disc brake pads in a recent video which in the current financial climate is another case of customers getting screwed over and over.
Good point
Sorry I like my rim brakes and the cost of changing to disc brakes is sky high l use alloy rims and yet to wear out a rim carbon rims not a fan 25 mm tyres have served me for years tubular tyres and still great old fashion sorry
I don't understand the point about iterations.
Shimano have chosen to have that number of iterations. They reaped the benefits of selling them, now they have to sleep in the bed they made.
Yes. That’s a very fair point.
He doesn't believe this done with Rim brake nonsense he knew the comments would errupt. Thumbnail says it all
I feel like many of these points are valid, very much so for new tech, but we should definitely consider that much of the older established tech has formed into de facto standards. English threaded BB, square taper, v-brake or caliper, cable brakes/shifters, 1-1/8" threadless or quill, etc. There are more but those kinds of standards. I don't see anything wrong with builders choosing to use these kinds of old standards for components on current production bikes. The new bikes benefit from an already existing pool of inexpensive replacement parts, and the older bikes benefit from securing long term availability of their replacement parts, keeping them in service longer
As a pro mech for years, 99% of riders have rim on there own bikes, speaks volumes
99%
yea yea but i like getting koms :/ does this mean ill have to make up for the discs by using ped's like the pros too?
I can setup or adjust my rim brakes in 5 minutes, I can replace my brake pads in 2 mins.
This entire rant should not be directed at the customer…
It’s the industry that has a problem here - I’m not switching from my 130 rim brake bikes until I can buy a new bike which has the ability to switch groupset manufacturers - there are no “standard” standards any more.
It’s like software going to subscription - it’s all just to get more sales…
I was a shop mechanic spanning 1” headtubes going to 1 1/8 going to the whole tapered mess we’ve got now.
Let’s face it there has always been bsa va Italian threading…
I guess the problem with: let's get behind disc brakes is that many people feel that it was prematurely and artificially pushed by industry. I think if the industry are going to force a change on their customers then it's their responsibility to get it right. We still see stories of the pros subtlely or not so subtlely preferring rim to disc at the highest level of competition, one example being froomey. The pros have access to the best, most quality controlled stuff and the best mechanics, so if they're still having issues and preferring rim, it makes sense that the average Joe is too.
Oh. Great comment. So true.
I think a lot of the issues with disc brakes are the manufacturers have not figured them out yet, and the LBS mechanics have no idea as well. No way in Hell I would let some hung over LBS mechanic work on my discs if I had em...
@@anthonylarson7919 It's not just LBS mechanics, froomeys mechanic is not an LBS mechanic, he's a pro.
@@kangzosa I hear ya. For such a simple machine there are a lot of bike issues. Simple cables, hoses, wires, levers and bearings. Does this industry just attract poor craftsmen?.
@@anthonylarson7919 I blame the engineers/designers of these products much more than I do bike mechanics. I think the important part about having the trifecta of Shimano Sram Campy isn't about having competition around the basic price of a groupset, but having competition that drives superior design. Unfortunately they all seem to want to compete on who can have the most cogs on a cassette at the back.
I get that we want healthy competition but I do wish Shimano made carbon frame bikes. Even with lackluster shimano design for certain things, their manufacturing quality and consistency of output is second to none, I'm pretty sure they'd figure out how to consistently make holes round on the bottom brackets of bikes, at the very least.
140mm disc Rotors have a place for light Riders, i myself am a
Haven't all major groupset manufactures been only focusing on disc brake groupsets for years. Shimanos new 12 speed dura ace and ultegra rim brake groupsets still come with last gen calipers. The last rim brake caliper shimano designed was 105 r7000 which came out in 2018.
Also you can't ignore that disc brake bikes cost more and are more expensive to maintain. When i got into cycling in 2017 it was a struggle convince my parents to buy me road bike, now it would be impossible with current prices.
I kind of like that it's a minefield in certain aspects. It has made me think about how I adapt my bikes and get the most out of them. I like the hunt for the solution. I have a 1980's Reynolds tube frame that now runs 11 speed gears, modern stem, compact bars and even has a headset with cartridge bearings. The whole bike has been an evolution over the years and I love that bike.
I also have a tarmac sl6 expert that I have recently converted to bsa bb and put a power meter on. The bikes fit my needs because I have made them that way and wouldn't change them for the world
That’s awesome Iain
what about proprietary parts on bikes ? will we able to find them in 5 years?
5 years, Probably, 10, highly unlikely
@@Mapdec so will we throw away a bike because we wont be able to find a part? its more important then rim brakes all these proprietary parts.
@@ozgurinsan good solution offered in yesterdays vid. Interesting chat.
I agree abut rim brakes. My main issue is the rain and how I can’t stop with wet rims. I do not ride in the rain on purpose, but at times it happen, and I simply cannot be confident of stopping well. My next bike with have hydraulic disc.
I couldn't disagree more with you on that one, I have older bikes that I love, So if we had no more rim bikes available I wouldn't be able to maintain those bikes and unlike new bikes the old bikes were not disposable, I can't imagine that the new bike I have will last as long, as there is so much that is proprietary stuff on those bikes, just try to get replacement fork or a Seatpost on one of those!!!!, the industry is going the wrong way!!!! don't get me wrong I like disk brakes and I have them on my newer bike,
let's not get sucked into the industry marketing
All your points are very well put and make sense for big manufacturers and carbon frames. Must not forget the smaller custom frame and custom component manufacturers though.
Yes. You are right.
Manufacturers often work against what consumers want. I don't remember any demand from customers that we all wanted press fit bb or aheadset, rather than the trusted threaded variety, which were so much more reliable. The Manufacturers forced them on us. Same is now happening with disc brakes.
No. We all asked for our bikes to be lighter and we were wowed by the amazing gram saving. So they just removed the aluminium tube from the frame that has the BB threads and removed the alu headset bearing cubs. There you go. So much weight saved, and we all went mad for it. Disc brakes are different. That change has been made by consumer demand, not so much for breaking power, but for the wider, deeper, lighter wheels they allow
I'm a retrogrouch and the thought of a new bike is depressing. Press fit BB (vs BB86), disk vs rim (I'm fine with Alu rims and rim brakes), cable routing (can I just change the cables easily please?), Tubeless? ...Could GAF. More batteries, oh dear lord. Maybe if I had a bike shop like yours in my area I'd feel differently. But finding competent service with the right tools is just a chore more and more with all the different standards and precision needed to make sure things are aligned properly. But I have to say I've greatly enjoyed all the videos you've been making lately and while I might not agree with this particular video I think what you've been putting out is great.
Thanks Mike. It’s ok to disagree, we learn more
I have three rim brake eleven spd, press fit carbon wonders.
I have never struggled with not enough felt or power from my brakes, and yes, lucky enough to have ridden the alps etc.
Ergonomics of the levers...... sweet. Wheel rims kasting more than 30,000km.
Cable routing, semi internal and easy to maintain, no rattle.
Three different bb30 installations, all as quiet as a mouse. I had more trouble with the previous threaded bbkts on earlier bikes. Now we have the best or worst of both, a threaded adaptor, commonly with a cartridge bag in it. We still have that press fit bearing.
My bikes aren't broke and are easy to work on. No brake noise.
I feel sorry for anyone trying to keep up with evolution, must be expensive.
I reckon it's gonna be a long time before evolution stops, so good luck trying to keep up with that.
I’d like to see Santa Cruz style internal routing on road bikes. Literally easier than external routing.
Yes. This is what I had in mind.
disc is more expensive, heavier, more difficult to maintain, more difficult to install, more difficult to adjust, less aero... other than that they are just fn dandy.
This makes a great deal of sense from a forward thinking perspective. There are countless bikes from the past 40 years that are still very serviceable. There will always be a place for these older standards. I hope quality parts are available to keep these bike rideable and enjoyable.
I'm still on rim. Was passed by an extremely loud disc brake bike today... Kssk, kssk, kssk... No thanks.
the only thing I like is being able to have fatter tires on my roadbike, but I guess that is becasue I am getting older :P
I love my rim brakes. A tech that is old, yes, but very mature, about 100 years mature. Maybe in the future I will get a Diskbrake bike, when the tech goes reliable, cheaper, and many iterations solve the hassle that is having them. China is making their own take on hydraulic diskbrake that don't suck and is not expensive. It's not there yet, but making enough noise to keep me interested.
WE need get behind new technologies? seems like the industry doesn't ask US. they just force it on us. it's really a question if we as customers hold on to old technologies waiting for brands to sort out and eliminate the problems of the new technology or if we as customers jump right in and pay big money for still faulty new technology until the third or fourth model/Iteration of that technology comes along. Do I buy the first ultegra disc brakes or do I stay on rim brakes until the third or fourth model of ultegra disc brakes comes along
I didn't realize rim brakes actually wear down the carbon fiber rims that much.. I assume the aluminum rims hold up better for wear?
Hella better.
Just found your channel and very much enjoying your insights on various topics! I have a stable of three bikes. One is a cromoly frame bike that I've had for about 15 years, with rim brakes. One is an aluminum frame bike with disc brakes (about 5 years old) and another is a carbon frame with disc brakes (about 3 years old). During the past couple of years, I've had the pleasure of experiencing spoke blowouts on three different occasions -- all on the disc brake bikes (actually just one spoke breaking, each time). Not remarkable for most people, I guess. But for me, I had never had a spoke break even one time on my rim-brake bike, so I was quite surprised when it happened on my disc brake bikes. I know there are probably a number of variables at play. But do you have any insight on whether the brake type itself has an impact on the wear and tear on spokes? (I'm still putting a lot of miles on my rim brake bike and still no spoke breakage.)
Welcome. We have vids on this. Are you disc wheels Carbon?
@@Mapdec Thanks! I'll look forward to seeing them. Both of the disc wheelsets are alloy wheelsets.
I’m a fatty, and prefer we’ll-braced spoking without high-Q. 13 speed cassettes and discs don’t help me. If the makers want to help, make affordable wireless shifting with buttons that can be placed where I want, and let brake levers be brake levers.
I just replaced my gravel bike brake discs after riding as commuter for 3 years. It only cost me $15 USD. If I had do replace rim wheels, the cheapest would be at least $150 USD for both wheels. I have a rim brake road bike and I only ride for weekends.
As a timetrialist there is no need for disc brakes on a tt bike also rim brakes are more aero on a tt bike as Hambini
Call me retro, but all of my bikes use rim brakes ( Bianchi TSX, Giant TCR, Waterford, and a Stumpjumper) I have no need for silly disc brakes. I also have no need for a tire wider than a 25.
Not retro, works for you. Will you switch when the time comes?!
@@Mapdec Never.....At least you can buy a new Campy Chorus rim brake group.....Of coyrse, you will have to live with sissy gearing.
How about built in brake lines? Standard connections either end. Short Flexi pipe connection either end of the frame.
Also why microspline over XD?
Oh. Nice idea. No idea how practical that is, but I see where you’re coming from.
Oh. Because the threads on XD get mashed by home mechanics and some can even get them on crooked. It’s not the foolproof solution that microspline is.
@@Mapdec maybe not currently practical but with the amount of bikes with tube in tube routing it wouldn't be a massive step up in manufacturing time. Just finding the right early adopters. I think btr fabrications made a frame or two with a setup to try it.
HG > All
@@Mapdec Nor is microspline foolproof. Re-installing a Microspline cassette caused me to cross-thread the lockring because of the finnicky alignment. That's the first time I have ever cross-threaded anything on a bike in 30years of maintaining my own bikes. Found installing an XD quite straightforward by comparison.
Wake me up when discs are lighter and more aero than rims. 1 out of my 4 bikes has discs and is the only bike that i have to adjust brakes on monthly basis due to rubbing or weak power. Rest of the bikes need adjusting on a bi- yearly basis, mostly due to new pads and i never remember complaining about the brakes. Not impressed with discs so far.
Thank you for this advice. I'm off to buy 1000$+ deep dish carbon wheels for my 400$ gravel/commuter bike in order to make discs viable. It's so simple !
Great video! Standardization helped every industry it touched. I feel in some respects we're getting there slowly. The BB situation is additionally complicated by tons of different axle standards so the number of stuff you need to keep in stock gets ridiculous.
BSA is fine with steel axles like GXP or Shimano standard, but for aluminium axles which are wider the bearings are these tiny things. I wish we'd settle on T47 and PF30 but BSA will probably live forever on sheer inertia. That'd still be 12 bottom brackets if you look at just SRAM, Shimano and Campagnolo axles plus legacy GXP (which is dying but bikes with it will still be around for years and years to come).
I am actively seeking out rim-brakes and friction shifters for ease of maintenance. I don't wanna deal with hydro fluid, kinked cables, or electronic shifting. esp. the latter. I think in one of your previous vids a commenter counted the parts on a bike one has to get charged to go on a ride and it was (at least) a total of 11 (!!). My 80ties. Randonneuring bike with friction downtube shifting and rim brakes needs nothing charged to be able to ride it. That's how cycling should be, not an elitist flex, showing off the newest wirelss (OMG!) shifting, but more inclusive to all who want to join with their mechanical shifting and rim brakes.
Before rim brakes need to be done, cycling as a whole needs to improve :)
I know. That was mental. I am not ready to fully embrace electronics yet, but I do think hydraulic brakes have become dependable enough.
Elitist Flex....Well said....I am stealing that Sir. WTF is going on with cyclists and all this "gear and kit"?. Just ride, break a sweat and have some fun.
Your 80s bike with whatever shifting certainly needs something; a modern and adaptable cyclist.
You should check your calendar; have you noticed that it’s 2022?
@@anthonylarson7919 because that’s part of the fun in cycling? Some cycle so you can enjoy their bike, and some ride their bike so they can enjoy their cycling? What’s won’t with that?
If anything; it’s you folks gatekeeping cycling with your idea of “oh cycling is not about the gear, it’s about just cycling and pushing yourself” who are the real elitist problem plaguing this hobby.
@@slowcyclist4324 2016 Skylon...I ride the hell out of it. All types of weather, no problems....although it will probably explode on my ride today now that I've stated this..haha
Certainly agree re disc brakes. The last time I bought a rim brake bike for myself was last century. Don't agree with you on Bottom brackets but I suspect you are right anyway. Both my bikes (Giant Revolt and Norco Revolver) have press fit bottom brackets, and I've had no issues with them. However manufacturers do seem to be phasing out press fit in favour of threaded bottom brackets.
Whats the point of having disc brakes in the Netherlands my rims last years and years and the wear is so minimal. A good carbon rim brake bike can be had for around 3000 with di2 and carbon rims if you want to buy a comparable disc bike hour have to pay at least 5000
I’m not sure that the industry are waiting for “everyone to get behind” a single way forward. The customer doesn’t have a lot of say. After all I’m sure none of us customers asked for umpteen different standards to come along with propriety this and that. The industry is wholly responsible for over complicating the options over subsequent decades.
To be frank, I think we need to mention Apple in this discussion. Everything is proprietary and everything has a planned obsolescence. You will never get every manufacturer to agree to a standard when the money is in assuring that they will soon need a replacement and that replacement must come from them. Apple perfected this model and (wealthy) customers embraced it wholeheartedly. Can't wait till they release the iPhone 2300!This is not affecting bicycles, but everything we buy now, unfortunately. I wouldn't be surprised to see a bike service where you pay a monthly fee to say Specialized and then they will provide you with a new bike every few years (or year if you are willing to pay enough). The days of purchasing anything that is designed to last ended about 10 years ago, because the manufacturers realized there is more money to be made if it doesn't last.
I wonder what your thought are on integrated bars/stems, from a riders perspective
from a rider, great. looks smart, nothing rattles or rubs... It just takes a lot effort to get them like that.
As a guy that does all of his own maintenance plus most of his friends, I'm no fan of carbon frames, disk brakes, electronic shifting and don't even mention internal cable routing especially through the bars and stem. It is all about
Me and my bikes will still be here when we come back to the stuff that works, vs. the e-bike stuff I don't want.
Yes, while it would be ideal to get behind the latest technologies like disc brakes etc, there are millions of bikes out there which are still fully functionable and being obsolete does not make them function any worse. Especially in this day and age where we are conscious of the evils of the throw away society that we are in and the environmental consequences of it, I cannot justify scrapping my rim brake bikes just because of the issues that you have highlighted in this video. Because it is becoming increasingly difficult to source these parts & components, I am currently thinking to start stockpiling them so that I can keep my bikes on the road way into the future. What I do agree with moving forward, is that manufacturers HAVE to reduce the variations in the different bike components, one thing that you didn't touch on in your video is the derailleur hanger!!! All those "standards" that you mentioned pale into insignificance when you think about the number of variations of the lowly derailleur hanger.
6-bolt rotors do have one advantage though -- they allow for a larger bearing on the non-drive side. Center-lock will only allow up to 28mm bearing, which forces hubs with 17-mm axles into the hard-to-find 17x28 bearings (instead of the widely available and standard 17x30).