Cassette weights

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Sellyb

Active Member
Hi,

I am thinking of changing the rear cassette on my bike from a 11-25t to a 11-28t or 11-36t. Can anyone tell me, please, if this would make much difference to the weight of the bike, or whether it would be only marginal?

Thanks
 
maybe a few grammes at best - you would not notice the weight difference...
 

youngoldbloke

The older I get, the faster I used to be ...
If you want to spend lots and lots of money I expect you can buy a cassette that is lighter than the one you have (unless you already have one of these Ceradure, of course ^_^). Different brands have different weights, generally lighter = more expensive. You are not going to notice not many extra grams.
 

TheDoctor

Noble and true, with a heart of steel
Moderator
Location
The TerrorVortex
Hold up a minute. You'll need a MTB rear mech to run the 11-36, and 10 speed MTB mechs won't work with road shifters - Shimano, bless their cotton socks, changed the cable pull. 11-28 should be fine with a road mech
 
Hold up a minute. You'll need a MTB rear mech to run the 11-36, and 10 speed MTB mechs won't work with road shifters - Shimano, bless their cotton socks, changed the cable pull. 11-28 should be fine with a road mech
You learn something every day :thumbsup: , I met somebody who was running a similar road/mtb arrangement but with Campy, I thought Shimano would have been able to do similar but I guess I'm wrong.
 

Kiwiavenger

im a little tea pot
I've just put a 11-28 on my bike with no probs, just need to put a new spoke in the rear wheel and true it up so i can ride it again!
 

amaferanga

Veteran
Location
Bolton
11-36 on a road bike will have some huge jumps between gears (since the chainrings are bigger than on a mtb) and will be horrible to ride I should think.
 
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