I think she typoed: The El Mariachi specs say 27-40.
I wouldn't apply the term "compact" to any of the mountain doubles. If anything, they are the opposite of compact. Here are three types of mountain double:
1) A 22-32-44 crankset with the 44 tooth ring removed (and possibly replaced with a bash guard).
2) Like above, but with the middle ring replaced by a larger ring at the factory - perhaps 22-36.
3) True doubles meant for use with wide range 10 speed cassettes. SRAM seems to like the ratios 26-39 and 28-42. The FSA crank on the El Mariachi splits the difference at 27-40.
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In the 2000-oughts, the MTB industry settled on a 22-32-44 crank with a 9 speed 11-34 (or 11-32 for flat landers) cassette as optimal. The problem is that a lot of gear ratios are duplicated. There might only be 13 distinct ratios.
With the change to 10 speed cassettes, it is possible to provide nearly the same lowest to highest range while eliminating many duplicates by using 2x10 gearing. I'm not sold on this though - this change does lose the lowest and highest gears!
I think SRAM has a (old) patent on cranks with 1:1.5 ratio chainrings. They found that this jump provides for smooth easy quick shifting. (26 times 1.5 is 39!) This wasn't useful until the 10 speed generation 'cause the 1.5 ratio is just a bit too big for narrower range cassettes.
Shimano's DynaSys ratios also claims better shifting than before.
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The 3x9's lowest gear (22:34) is gone from the 2x10 system. The 3x9's next lowest gear (22:30) is almost the same as the 2x10's lowest gear (26:36).
At the other end, the 3x9's highest gear (44:11) is also gone from the 2x10 system. The 3x9's next highest gear (44:13) is comparable to the 2x10's highest gear (39:11).
And of course, those of us who are thrilled to use a 29er 36 tooth 9-speed cassette to provide an even lower gear on a 26er - well, we're left out in the cold.
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Do you need the extremes of gear ratios? Do you need to zoom down a highway to get to a monster climb?




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