While I love the numbers, this is one particular rabbithole I've not been keen on venturing down..
This became necessity recently when playing with the cranks on the Fuji; and I've come to recognise that some cranksets are considerably wider than others - with potential repercussions on rider comfort.
For those who don't know, crank Q-factor is the distance across the bike between the outside faces of both crank arms at the pedals (actually might be pedal register face where it screws in, which is typically counterbored slightly).
Road groupsets are apparently narrower; partially because they have less need for wide spacings to allow clearance with at tyres and give appropriate chainlines with wide rear axles / dropout spacing.
I plan to do some tickling with the measuring stick later, but for now published values suggest Q-factors of 146mm for R7000 105 (road), 151mm for 810 GRX (gravel) and 172mm for M8100 Deore XT (MTB). That's 26mm or pushing 20% difference between the road and MTB cranksets; so not insignificant.
I have a queer, fairly wide stance with a lot of toe-out and tend to concentrate load on the outsides of my feet. I've got wedges in my cycling shoes to try to counteract this, but having got out on the Genesis last night (105 crankset) I noticed quite a lot of aching in the outsides of my feet and wonder if this is partially due to the crank's narrow Q-factor - since the closer together my feet become the less flat their soles are to the ground. I don't seem to get this issue so much with the Fuji, which runs an older M590 Deore crankset which I believe is around 170-175mm Q-factor (granted it's also running flats so not a direct comparison).
I'm tempted to sling some pedal spacers on the Genesis; while I've oft-been tempted by a new crankset as the 50/34 gearing's a bit high for its intended purpose and I'd prefer shorter cranks. As a bit of an aside, I also wonder how optimised the 105 crank's chainline is with the MTB-derived 142mm axle spacing on the rear, when road stuff is typically 130mm IIRC. I've been looking at GRX cranks but wonder if something MTB-focussed would be more appropriate - ratios and fitment permitting...
As always I'm interested to hear any thoughts anyone might have on Q-factor, fit / comfort or anything to do with the thoughts above
This became necessity recently when playing with the cranks on the Fuji; and I've come to recognise that some cranksets are considerably wider than others - with potential repercussions on rider comfort.
For those who don't know, crank Q-factor is the distance across the bike between the outside faces of both crank arms at the pedals (actually might be pedal register face where it screws in, which is typically counterbored slightly).
Road groupsets are apparently narrower; partially because they have less need for wide spacings to allow clearance with at tyres and give appropriate chainlines with wide rear axles / dropout spacing.
I plan to do some tickling with the measuring stick later, but for now published values suggest Q-factors of 146mm for R7000 105 (road), 151mm for 810 GRX (gravel) and 172mm for M8100 Deore XT (MTB). That's 26mm or pushing 20% difference between the road and MTB cranksets; so not insignificant.
I have a queer, fairly wide stance with a lot of toe-out and tend to concentrate load on the outsides of my feet. I've got wedges in my cycling shoes to try to counteract this, but having got out on the Genesis last night (105 crankset) I noticed quite a lot of aching in the outsides of my feet and wonder if this is partially due to the crank's narrow Q-factor - since the closer together my feet become the less flat their soles are to the ground. I don't seem to get this issue so much with the Fuji, which runs an older M590 Deore crankset which I believe is around 170-175mm Q-factor (granted it's also running flats so not a direct comparison).
I'm tempted to sling some pedal spacers on the Genesis; while I've oft-been tempted by a new crankset as the 50/34 gearing's a bit high for its intended purpose and I'd prefer shorter cranks. As a bit of an aside, I also wonder how optimised the 105 crank's chainline is with the MTB-derived 142mm axle spacing on the rear, when road stuff is typically 130mm IIRC. I've been looking at GRX cranks but wonder if something MTB-focussed would be more appropriate - ratios and fitment permitting...
As always I'm interested to hear any thoughts anyone might have on Q-factor, fit / comfort or anything to do with the thoughts above

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