- Location
- London
>>If a challenge: cut a few mm off, to a 'clean' end'.OK I'll bite (and am with @Dogtrousers and @Ming the Merciless here).
If not secured (crimped) properly, yes they can come off.
"Hell of a job"? ". . . near impossible to get one of those crush-on caps on the end."
Relay the cable strands with fingertips. The hole in a cable end is 50+% larger than the cable diameter. Poke it! If a challenge: cut a few mm off, to a 'clean' end'.
Cable ends are best bought 10 at a time at your LBS. How many are you likely to 'get through' in a year (personal use)?
How do you decide when gear cables are "past their best"?
often not a lot to cut - on many of my bikes the cables have to be cut very short beyond the clamp in the first place to avoid interferebce with other bits of the bike/me.
>>How do you decide when gear cables are "past their best"?
Fraying the business end of the clamping point.** Or now and again when I replace the outers because of issues.
** never again will I ignore this after once having to ride to a fixed time train in the small front ring as a cable had bust/detached.
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