So by bike mechanic is saying the SRAM components are far better than shimano.
What are your experiences? It sure would be nice to buy american!
Lisa![]()
So by bike mechanic is saying the SRAM components are far better than shimano.
What are your experiences? It sure would be nice to buy american!
Lisa![]()
"Far better", um no.
They both have different feels and shifting mechanisms, and it's a personal preference thing. But they are both about equal at similar component levels IMO. I physically cannot comfortably shift SRAM Red with it's new "double tap" design and my small hands, so for me SRAM is absolutely worthless. I can see where other riders would get used to it and like it though.
All my bikes (2 mountain, 2 road) run full Shimano and it's never given me a problem on any of them.
Ride them both and make your own decision if you have a choice. Otherwise just buy the bike and ride it.
I agree, the Shimano Ultegra and Dura Ace that I have on my present bikes performs seamlessly. I wonder if SRAM has designed shifters for smaller hands that are woman friendly.
Lisa
Interesting, I actually love SRAM because I feel the double tap is much easier then the long throw of Shimano.
I felt it works better for smaller hands, but jmho
Ask Andrea how she likes it, She rides RED. I have not been able to, financially, upgrade to Red, but I am super happy with my rival/force mixture
Not to go completely off topic, but I am saving up for the re-designed Campy hoods. They fit my hands perfectly; I used them on a rental bike on a trip earlier this year. My hands are not too small but smaller than the average man's I would think. I always found Shimano hoods to be too big for me.
Karen
Long throw? My Ultegras engage almost instantly and I don't have to go more than a few cm to get a shift. I do have shims in them to make the reach shorter, but that was an easy adjustment.
Maybe the SRAM I rode was out of adjustment (highly highly unlikely considering the shop). I could get the first shift fine, but then to get it to shift the other direction I had to basically let go of the handlebar and rotate my hand all the way around to get it far enough over to shift.
My Sora "crap" doesn't take that much distance, even when it's out of adjustment.
I have extremely small hands and have been enthusiastically using sram since it launched, starting with force (cross bike) and rival (road bike) and recently upgrading to red on the road bike. I find the double tap shifting to be effortless, compared to shimano shifter which I find require a great deal of force to shift. The reach from the sram hoods is smaller than the reach with shimano (the shape of the hoods is quite different) and I find that the sram brakes require less force to brake than say shimano. I can up and downshift in the drops, unlike my prior campy components where I couldn't reach the thumb shifter in the drops. Best of all, Red (and 2009 force and rival) have adjustable length grips on the levers, so I was able to move the levers very close to the stem, permitting confident braking in the drops (something I've never previously had).
Again, these are all matters of personal preference, but I do have mutantly small hands (my pinky is less than 2" long and I can't reach an octave on the piano) and I am using this equipment with no problems. So I would be reluctant to label sram as small hand or female unfriendly!
E.'s website: www.earchphoto.com
2005 Bianchi 928C L'Una RC
2010 BMC SLX01 racemaster
2008 BMC TT03 Time Machine
Campy Record and SSM Aspide naked carbon on all bikes