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joseph.santaniello@gmail.com
12-31-1969, 08:00 PM
Hi All,

I have a TT bike which has Shimano 9s bar ends. I have now also some
wheels which I would like to use which only accept a 10s cassette. I
don't feel like buying new 10s bar ends, nor monkeying with a
shiftmate.

How difficult is it to use Shimano 10s with bar-ends in friction mode?
This is a TT bike which will be going (hopefully) fast such that I
won't be able to hear the chain.

I could of course just try it, but the bike isn't fully assembled and
rather that finish it in a way that may not work isn't something I
want to use time on now. Plus I don't have a 10s chain lying around.

Joseph

Ron Ruff
01-04-1970, 07:02 AM
No reason it shouldn't work... the span of a 10spd cassette is
slightly less than a 9spd.

joseph.santaniello@gmail.com
01-04-1970, 07:04 AM
On Apr 6, 3:02*am, Ron Ruff <rruffrr...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> No reason it shouldn't work... the span of a 10spd cassette is
> slightly less than a 9spd.

So the 9s spacing is close enough to 10s spacing that if I test
friction mode with 9s and find it acceptable, 10s should be
essentially the same?

The bike has a 9s chain on it and I have no extra pins to put it back
on if I remove it, so I don't want to borrow a 10s chain (with a
Wipperman link) from another bike to test.

Joseph

A R:nen
01-04-1970, 07:06 AM
"joseph.santaniello@gmail.com" <joseph.santaniello@gmail.com> writes:

> So the 9s spacing is close enough to 10s spacing that if I test
> friction mode with 9s and find it acceptable, 10s should be
> essentially the same?

Yes. If your last experiences from friction shifting are from the
5s/6s era (like mine were until a few years ago when I took my time
repairing a brifter), you'll probably notice that it is a bit trickier
with the closer spacing, but certainly still doable.

joseph.santaniello@gmail.com
01-04-1970, 07:06 AM
On Apr 6, 9:00*pm, oronk...@ling.helsinki.fi (A R:nen) wrote:
> "joseph.santanie...@gmail.com" <joseph.santanie...@gmail.com> writes:
> > So the 9s spacing is close enough to 10s spacing that if I test
> > friction mode with 9s and find it acceptable, 10s should be
> > essentially the same?
>
> Yes. If your last experiences from friction shifting are from the
> 5s/6s era (like mine were until a few years ago when I took my time
> repairing a brifter), you'll probably notice that it is a bit trickier
> with the closer spacing, but certainly still doable.

I jumped from 6s friction to 10s brifters about 3 years ago. Never had
any issues with friction. I'll give it a go. And with this TT bike my
hands are on the shifters the whole time so small adjustments
shouldn't be too much of a hassle, like they might be if they were on
the D/T.

Joseph