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7 reasons why you should get electronic shifting

The advantages of ditching mechanical shifting and going electronic

Shimano, Campagnolo and SRAM have all offered electronic shifting for several years, FSA has joined them, and SRAM has updated its eTap system to 12-speed and launched a less expensive Force eTap. With complete electronic-shift bikes costing from around £2,400, should you be thinking about making the move?

Let's take a look at the advantages.

Check out our Shimano Dura-Ace R9150 Di2 review here

Improved shifts

How much more precise than mechanical shifts can electronic shifts be? Well, with a mechanical system, if you push the lever to move from one chainring to the other the front mech performs the same every time. With an electronic system the front mech acts slightly differently depending on the sprocket you’re in at the time.

2021 Shimano GRX Di2 groupset - rear mech.jpg

Take SRAM’s eTap system. When you move from the small chainring to the big chainring, the cage overshifts slightly to help the chain make the jump. Then a fraction of a second later, once the chain is up there, the cage moves back inboard to its standard position.

2022 Cervelo R5 Force eTap AXS - front mech.jpg

When you’re shifting from the big chainring to the small chainring, the cage moves inboard in two stages. First, it shifts just enough to move the chain down. Then a fraction of a second later, once the chain is down on the inner ring, it moves a little further across. Doing things this way avoids the possibility of the chain coming off the inside of the small chainring.

The extent to which these two things happen depends on the sprocket that you’re in at the time. Say you have the chain on the small chainring and one of the larger sprockets and you want to change to the large chainring. The rear mech lets the front mech know that it needs to overshift more than it would if the chain was further outboard on one of the smaller sprockets.

The bottom line is that you get excellent shifting even under load.

Read our SRAM Force eTap AXS Wide groupset review

"Dura-Ace or Ultegra Di2 electronic gear shifting moves the chain exactly where it needs to be through a programmed front or rear derailleur position," says Shimano.

"The science behind it is truly incredible and also programmable to your specific shifting preference [see below]. You make a command and the system responds accurately every time. In a race situation the reliability and the confidence it inspires can mean the difference between making a break or not."

Quicker shifting

If you want to shift right across the cassette with a mechanical shift system, you need to press the lever more than once (different systems require different numbers of presses). With electronic systems you can shift from one side of the cassette to the other when you press and hold the lever in. It’s just a little bit easier.

eps 12 SR-EPS_cambio-2020

Campagnolo claims that, “[EPS rear derailleur] shift times are now 25% faster that than the mechanical rear derailleur (taking just 0.352 seconds to swap sprockets)”.

Check out our reviews of Shimano Ultegra Di2.

You can customise the shifting

With Shimano Di2 and SRAM AXS eTap you can customise the shifting speed and the number of gears the system will shift when you press and hold the lever. You can also swap the functions of the upshift lever and the downshift lever, and even the functions of the left lever and the right lever. SRAM's first Red eTap system didn't have the ability to customise the shifting, but the two new AXS 12-speed groups can be customised via a smartphone app.

Shimano Dura-Ace R9200 Groupset 6

Campagnolo's MyCampy app allows you to customise shifter function in an EPS system.

MyCampy_MySession_web_close.jpg

No chain rub

Once a Shimano Di2 or Campagnolo EPS system is set up correctly, no matter what sprocket you are in you never need to adjust the position of the front mech to prevent the chain rubbing on the front mech’s side plates because it is done automatically.

Shimano Dura-Ace R9200 - Pinarello Dogma F - Detail (CREDIT Irmo Keizer_Andreas Dobslaf)-11

After you shift the rear derailleur you’ll sometimes hear a whirr as the front mech moves slightly to take account of the chain’s new position, the idea being to improve efficiency and reduce wear.

SRAM says this isn’t necessary with its eTap system because there’s no danger of chainrub no matter which chainring/sprocket combo you’re using.

Read our SRAM Red eTap First Ride.

Simple operation

Changing gear with an electronic system requires a far shorter lever movement than with the mechanical equivalents. You’re really just pressing a button, never needing to sweep a lever across.

eps 12 SR-EPS_ergopower-2020

Moving the levers on a mechanical system is hardly the trickiest operation in the world, but it can be a bit of a reach if you want to shift across the entire range available to you. Things are just a little simpler with electronic systems.

SRAM RED eTap Shifter.jpg

With SRAM’s eTap system the lever on one shifter performs upshifts, the lever on the other shifter performs downshifts, and you push them both at the same time to shift between chainrings. It’s a really simple system to use, even if you’re wearing big gloves or mittens in cold weather.

Multiple shift position options

On a road bike with Shimano or SRAM electronic shifting you usually change gear via the combined brake and gear shifters, a lot like you would with a mechanical system, but you can add satellite shifters elsewhere on your handlebar to make it slightly easier to change gear in certain situations, especially when racing.

Shimano offers its Climbing Shifter that you can fix to the top section of your handlebar.

Lampre Merida's Merida Scultura 2013 11.jpg

It also has a Sprinter Shifter that you can fit to the drops.

Focus Izalco SRAM eTap  - 17.jpg

SRAM’s eTap system has satellite shifters called Blips that you can position anywhere on the handlebar, and now there's a wireless version too.

You can change gear on a time trial bike while out of the saddle

If you’re riding a time trial/triathlon bike with mechanical shifting, the shift levers will be positioned at the front of the aero extensions where they’re easy to access when you’re in your aero position. That means you can’t change gear when you’re riding out of the saddle with your hands on the base bar.

With an electronic system, you can have shifters on the aero extensions and on the base bar, so it’s easy to change gear if you’re out of the saddle when climbing or coming out of a tight corner.

Canyon Speedmax CF 9.0 SL - bar end shifter

Read our Campagnolo EPS First Ride from way back when it was first launched.

There’s minimal maintenance

Vitus Energie Evo SRAM Rival AXS RCCR 8

With an electronic system there’s very little routine maintenance and you’ll never need to replace a cable. Little, if any, tuning is required after the initial set-up.

Even that initial setup is very easy with SRAM’s eTap system. It’s wireless so there’s no need to route cables through your frame.

Mechanical shifting has been working fine for many, many years and it will continue to do so, and it’s considerably cheaper than an electronic setup. If you don’t find the benefits we’ve listed above compelling enough to convince you to change to electronic, no component manufacturer is going to stop offering mechanical shifting any time soon.

SRAM RED eTap Charger.jpg

One of the most frequent objections to going electronic is the possibility of running out of charge mid-ride. That’s unlikely to happen unless you really don’t concentrate. You’ll get hundreds of miles between charges on every electronic shift system, and plenty of warning that you’re low on juice.

Even if the battery does go flat, you can manually put the chain into the gear you want and ride home singlespeed.

Of course, you don’t need to make the switch to electronic shifting.

"You can also get precise, fast and accurate shifting from Dura-Ace, Ultegra or 105 mechanical gears," says Shimano. "In this sense, as well as making a command – ie pushing the lever – you also operate the system by pulling or releasing a cable.

"There's a certain art to setting up your drivetrain manually to get this level of efficiency. A lot of riders prefer to know how to operate every individual component within their drivetrain, which is easier with a mechanical system.

"With each type of shifting having its merits, the question is whether you want to command your drive train through the push of a button, or to physically operate it using a lever. Perhaps the answer is to have both depending on the particulars of your ride."

Most people we know who have tried electronic shifting for a significant period of time want to stick with it, but the choice is yours.

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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129 comments

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to paradyzer | 5 years ago
1 like

paradyzer wrote:

Having tried Di2, I can see why it is popular and why it is to be desired.. 

To me personally, however, a bike that needs charging in order to  fully function somehow misses the point of what a bicycle is  3 to me it is a mode of transport, a device that enables you to get from point A to point B completely independently, and with no additional energy input other that that produced by your own body! It is fully independent! Each to their own though  3 (and yes, I'm aware that lights fall into rechargeable territory, however a bike can operate without them, plus lights can be connected to dynamos which follows the same ethos)

The rider would also typically need to be recharged between long rides.

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hawkinspeter replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
2 likes

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

muppetkeeper wrote:

I've only read two pages of comments, so it may have been said.  My Di2 sends info to my head unit to tell me what gear I'm in.  I'm no pro and sometimes I lose track, and cycling in the steep Spanish mountains its good to know if you need to "man up" or if you have another cog left.

I also, ultimate sin of sins, use the function that shifts my rear two up or two down when I move the front, it saves me a few "clicks".

Is it beyond the skill of the 'modern' cyclist to simply have a look down to see where your chain lies/how many sprockets you have left in hand? I mean, even Chris Froome could do that whilst on a steep climb never mind a non competitive type, and in any case how is that going to help you, you can't magically produce a lower or higher gear can you, so what if you know what gear you are in and have only one sprocket left, how is that going to actually change anything if you don't know?

Your statement makes zero sense whatsoever, either you can cycle up the hill in the lowest gear you have or you can't, you don't run out of gears nor have to 'man up(whatever the hell that means), you simply haven't fitted a low enough gear for your ability/difficulty of terrain or you have to push harder to keep going than you might have expected to. 

knowing where you are on the sprockets is immaterial to your ability to get up a slope or not.

Personally, I love my SC-MT800 display for showing what gear I'm in. It's most useful for knowing when the synchro-shift is about to change your front chainring, though that's probably Di2 creating and solving its own problem.

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part_robot replied to tugglesthegreat | 7 years ago
0 likes

tugglesthegreat wrote:

No chain rub no matter what!  I'm sold?

I have zero chain rub in any combination on my mechanical 9100. No idea if I've done something special but that's how it us.

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dreamlx10 replied to Daddylonglegs | 5 years ago
0 likes

Daddylonglegs wrote:

Chris Boardman described electronic shifting as 'a solution looking for a problem'

 

Yet he is selling some of his bikes with Di2 installed 

 

 

 

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roubaixcobbles replied to BartNotSimpson | 4 years ago
0 likes

Can't see how that would happen, just tried it on my Ultegra Di2 and it shifts up one gear then when it senses the chain isn't moving with it, it stops, it doesn't go on all night trying to change gear! Sure your mate didn't just forget to charge their battery and made up a cunning excuse?!

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kil0ran replied to part_robot | 7 years ago
0 likes

part_robot wrote:

tugglesthegreat wrote:

No chain rub no matter what!  I'm sold?

I have zero chain rub in any combination on my mechanical 9100. No idea if I've done something special but that's how it us.

Ditto - on both Tiagra and 105 setups. Just need to remember to use the trim function properly. Which works perfectly if you set the mech up following the Shimano DM and have a barrel adjuster in the front mech cable

 

 

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kil0ran | 7 years ago
0 likes

I've gone back from Di2 Ultegra to mixed 105/Tiagra groups on both my bikes. Both built and set up by me and I'm very happy with the shift performance. Way back up the comments I said that Di2 was easier to setup for the home mechanic but having done two mechanical shifting bikes now I'm not so sure. Maybe I've been lucky but I've had no issues setting up the front mechs - 105 on one bike, Tiagra 4700 on the other. By doing it I now completely get the way that mechanical shifting works and in particular the importance of good barrel adjusters, the correct ferrules, and clean runs. Quite satisfying mastering something that a lot of people see as a black art and it also means I'm far less scared about tinkering with the shift to get it absolutely perfect.

If you're having trouble setting up a Shimano front mech just get the official Shimano Dealer manual. The steps are different to the various online guides from the likes of Park & Art's Cyclery but if you follow them you'll get your mech in the ballpark and can then tune it with the barrel adjuster. Pay close attention to the trim positions in particular, as the non-Shimano guides don't usually cover this and can lead you astray.

Having set up both there is now very little difference in shift performance between Tiagra & 105. Where 105 wins is lightness of chainset and braking performance. Likewise Ultegra - lighter components and only slightly better shifting at the rear, particularly now that the low profile front mech has appeared at 105 level.

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stub | 7 years ago
1 like

I run Ultegra 6800 Di2 on one bike and mechanical 105 5800 on the other.

The rear shift on 105 is really light and very close to Di2 in my opinion, but...

Setup is much easier. In my experience mechanical front mechs are total dogs to set up and get absolutely perfect (admittedly I've only used Shimano ones of various vintages).  I even bought the newest FD-5801 that is supposed to have a super light action and no need for the long arm that hits my mudguard. After an hour I'm still yet to have it functioning nicely. Di2 means no frayed cables in the front mech or trying to pull the cables as tight as possible and still finding them too slack. Neither of my mechnical bikes have barrel adjusters (hence the purchase of the FD5801 which has barrel adjustment on the mech itself).

Shift is close between the two but Di2 does allow me to change up the cassette rapidly when going uphill out of the saddle at full effort (when I realise I'm in the wrong gear). That isn't something I'd even attempt on mechanical (I wouldn't be able to even operate the lever fully when out of the saddle). Front shift is miles cleaner, and no need to trim is something I totally take for granted and irritates me on mechanical when I go back. The semi synchro shift on Di2 is a really nice touch, dropping up or down the cassette on a front shift as appropriate to minimise the impact. It's so seamless I only ride in that mode.

I appreciate there is a massive cost disparity and 105 mechanical is damn good for how little it costs, but the Di2 bike is much less maintenance, no cable stretching, and works perfectly every single time.

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iandusud | 7 years ago
0 likes

Personally I don't want electronic shifting but I like the technology and totally understand anyone who wants to use it. However when Shimano brought out Di2 my immediate reaction was that they had dropped the ball with a wired system and said so at the time. In this day and age all electronic devices communicate wirelessly. Also the system is so vulnerable to a wire getting damaged. I wasn't in the least surprised when Sram came out with a wireless system, it's the only way to go. 

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kev-s | 7 years ago
0 likes

Ive run Shimano Di2 for over 6 years now in the following forms

Ultegra 6700, Ultegra 6800, Dura ace 7900, Dura ace 9000 and along with the disc brake versions of Ultegra 6800 and Dura ace 9000 Di2

 

All were used in all weathers including commuting to work (5000 miles a year) in all weathers including snow

 

All were absolutley faultless, great shifting everytime, i was a complete convert and not willing to go back to mechanical shifting and rim brakes

 

Yet my current bike has Campag super record mechanical and rim brakes and i absolutley love it!!!

 

Di2 is great but there's nothing like the feel of a mechanical groupset to me, yes it can be less smooth than Di2 and need a little more maintaince but for feedback and feeling you cant beat it

 

Im only gripe with mechanical shifting after having Di2 for so long is having to trim the front mech! 

 

 

Avatar
simonmb | 7 years ago
4 likes

Can we expect an article "Why you should stick with mechanical shifting"? There are surely as many valid points to be made.

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MarkiMark | 7 years ago
2 likes

Had a go on a mate's Ultegra Di2 and ended up unimpressed. I use Campag Potenza and gear shifts are superb, can't see the point in electronic. But then again I'm the sort of person who believes cables should be externally routed, and enjoys the occasional tweak of the barrel adjuster to make shifts that little bit more perfect.

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ricardito | 7 years ago
3 likes

I like my tech as much as the next person, but somehow when it comes to bikes I like the idea that they are something that any Victorian engineer could look and understand (notwithstanding that some parts, such as derailleurs, were invented later). Just an irrational aesthetic notion, I know...

Or perhaps it's just that I've had enough struggles with electronic devices and their susceptibility to battery failure, firmware updates that brick them, or just the phase of the moon, and bicycles provide an escape from them...

Perhaps I'd feel differently if I thought that mechanical shifting was a problem urgently in need of a solution  3

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HLaB | 7 years ago
0 likes

When its more affordable perhaps but tha fraction of second improvement doesn't do it for me VfM wise at the moment. 

I suppose the batteries are improving but I've seen too many riders have to abandon due to flat batteries before the ride even starts, that thought doesn't do it for me either  7

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therevokid | 7 years ago
0 likes

i've di2 on my Mason and love the "almost" fit and forget .... once setup it's

check the charge once a month and ride. any weather, any conditions, any time

martini like  1

Not sure about the shape of some of the hoods so looking longingly at the

etap hydro but as a couple of others have said .... no cash for that kind

of "splurge"  1

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BlindFreddy | 7 years ago
0 likes

Wired is passe because its an invitation to sealing problems and it looks bad. Wifi is the future but until as Sram has some competition, people will be a shy of going this route. In the meantime Sram will understandably exploit early adopters to recoup development costs and effectively beta test the technology. However with wifi competition from the laggards at Shimano and Compagnolo, prices will come down and performance and reliability only improve further. At that time lots of ordinary people will go electronic - me included.

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Redvee | 7 years ago
0 likes

I want Etap Hydro but two things stopping that happening. Finding stock and the cash, other than that it's all systems go enlightened

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Biggus-Dickkus | 7 years ago
0 likes

Don't get me wrong I am a Di2 fan and have 3 bikes all ftted with Ultegra Di2. However when purchasing my last bike (SuperSix Evo) I rode both versions: mechanical and electronic Ultegra groupsets and the bike with mechanical shifting was noticably lighter...

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Boss Hogg | 8 years ago
6 likes

"Why you should switch to electronic shifting" - well, we shouldn't switch to anything. Why is the media trying to make us buy stuff? I ride a hydro disc brake road bike (and love it) but I am telling no one, they "should" switch to disc brakes. Product marketing is legitimate but better left to the companies who sell their products.

Avatar
bumble | 9 years ago
3 likes

Hopefully, Shimano will now concentrate on chasing the big-spenders, tempting them with ever shinier, more expensive electronic groupsets, and they'll stop buggering around with the real star of the line-up; Sora.

(cheap parts, reliable shifting - thanks to the long cablepull, equally spaced chainring bolts, optional triple, etc.)

 

 

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jlebrech replied to bumble | 6 years ago
0 likes

bumble wrote:

Hopefully, Shimano will now concentrate on chasing the big-spenders, tempting them with ever shinier, more expensive electronic groupsets, and they'll stop buggering around with the real star of the line-up; Sora.

(cheap parts, reliable shifting - thanks to the long cablepull, equally spaced chainring bolts, optional triple, etc.)

 

 

 

Sora Di3 Triple, flappy paddle up, flappy paddle down. semi mech. maybe just have the di2 actuate the cable from the hoods.

Avatar
Daipink | 9 years ago
3 likes

I can give you over 400 reasons why you shouldn't! A quick check on Chain Reaction Cycles website shows Ultegra Di2 is over £420 dearer than mechanical. Invest the difference in a better set of wheels for a much more effective performance enhancement.

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ch replied to Daipink | 9 years ago
0 likes

Daipink wrote:

I can give you over 400 reasons why you shouldn't! A quick check on Chain Reaction Cycles website shows Ultegra Di2 is over £420 dearer than mechanical. Invest the difference in a better set of wheels for a much more effective performance enhancement.

 

Over time this price difference will diminish.  Also, you never know when a bargain might appear, e.g., a good deal on a used bike with electronic shifting (actually happened to my friend).

I'm in no rush.

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WashoutWheeler replied to ch | 6 years ago
0 likes

ch wrote:

Daipink wrote:

I can give you over 400 reasons why you shouldn't! A quick check on Chain Reaction Cycles website shows Ultegra Di2 is over £420 dearer than mechanical. Invest the difference in a better set of wheels for a much more effective performance enhancement.

 

Over time this price difference will diminish.  Also, you never know when a bargain might appear, e.g., a good deal on a used bike with electronic shifting (actually happened to my friend).

I'm in no rush.

All the more reason to buy those wheels now then you can PROVE to the wife the savings are better using the same logic as shoe & handbag purchases. Personaly I am not good enough or fast enough to bother with electronic toys but a nice set of light free rolling wheels will help.

Avatar
David Arthur @d... replied to WashoutWheeler | 6 years ago
2 likes

WashoutWheeler wrote:

. Personaly I am not good enough or fast enough to bother with electronic toys but a nice set of light free rolling wheels will help.

 

Do you need to be either of those things to justify electronic toys?

Avatar
WashoutWheeler replied to David Arthur @davearthur | 6 years ago
0 likes

David Arthur @davearthur wrote:

WashoutWheeler wrote:

. Personaly I am not good enough or fast enough to bother with electronic toys but a nice set of light free rolling wheels will help.

 

Do you need to be either of those things to justify electronic toys?

I am not sure if these are toys, certainly Mr Boardman feels they are unessecary embuggerance and he knows a good deal more than me about cycling and bikes!

My point was that if,  I were a Fast - Professional Rider who depended upon wins for my living,  if electronic shifting MIGHT make the difference between my winning or losing,  that might be sufficient grounds to justify the cost of  investment.

Personaly I cant see how spending another grand and adding extra weight will aid me, A nice wheel upgrade? Now that is worth saving for IMHO.

Avatar
BBB | 9 years ago
4 likes

Most of people understand the benefits of electronic shifting but at the current prices it's nothing more than just a toy for people with high disposable income.
It also makes a very poor long term investment as components will be becoming quickly obsolete (not repairable/servicable) at least in case of Shimano.
The article/feature should be more critical and objective.

For anyone who truly enjoys riding it makes little difference how the gears are changed. Some people really spend too much time thinking about equipment.

Avatar
ch replied to BBB | 9 years ago
0 likes

BBB wrote:

Most of people understand the benefits of electronic shifting but at the current prices it's nothing more than just a toy for people with high disposable income. It also makes a very poor long term investment as components will be becoming quickly obsolete (not repairable/servicable) at least in case of Shimano. ...

I'm happily using 10-speed mechanical indexed, components of which are cheap due to the advent of 11-speed.  So I catch your drift.  But at some future time, IF I were to "upgrade" to 11-speed, I'd have to compare a pricey 11-speed mechanical shifter-derailleur setup to the comparable electronic setup.  In terms of price - they are both expensive.  In terms of maintenance and performance - taking into account reports from actual riders I know personally about how their electronic shifter systems are holding up and how they perform - again the adjustment is automatic, haven't heard yet of the motors burning out, but obviously battery lifetime and time to empty are a bottleneck.

Oh yes - no cable fray.  Even though I try to replace the cables "in time" - I've been caught out a half dozen times - usually in the middle of a long hilly ride.

Avatar
shay cycles | 9 years ago
1 like

Most of the people who are less than impressed haven't tried the electronic system.

I have however tried it Di2 on a Pinnarello test bike and in fairness it did work quite well and the little tweak on the front changer when changing cogs at the back was quite cool.

But I wasn't impressed enough to feel it worth the bother. In fact when I was back on my vintage road bike for another circuit with a colleague using the Di2 it felt fine and certainly my gear changes were as slick as my riding companion on the Di2. Bearing in mind that my setup was 30 years old with an 8 speed cassette and no indexing and Simplex retro friction downtube levers that is saying something. Trimming the front was something we just learned to do and I still happily change either mech with either hand.

Of course 30 year old technology isn't for everyone as you have to learn the technique so modern indexed systems are actually great. The Di2 however offered very little advantage over my cable operated Sora system on my tourer and I have no problem tweaking and trimming on that either.

If I were racing I would still, as I used to, go for the best quality robust and reliable system I could find (in the old days that was a mixture of Campag Record and Shimano Dura-Ace) but I certainly wouldn't go electronic.

Why? simple really - unneccesary complexity and reliance on a power source.

Avatar
ch replied to shay cycles | 9 years ago
0 likes

shay cycles wrote:

 Bearing in mind that my setup was 30 years old with an 8 speed cassette and no indexing and Simplex retro friction downtube levers that is saying something. Trimming the front was something we just learned to do and I still happily change either mech with either hand.Of course 30 year old technology isn't for everyone as you have to learn the technique so modern indexed systems are actually great.

I think you have extended the debate to include whether more than an 8 speed cassette is really necessary.  I think you should only consider the 11-speed manual vs electric case.

I imagine e a 10 or 11  shifting w/out indexing would be more diffcult than 8 sp shifting w/out indexing.

 

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