What is the difference between 11-28 and 11-32 cassette?
What is the difference between 11-28 and 11-32 cassette?
In the event you find yourself grinding up a hill at 7 mph, the 11-32 cassette allows you to ride at 81 rpm, while with the 11-28, you’ll be riding at 71 rpm. One final thing to note: The 11-32 cassette needs a longer cage derailleur and a longer chain than the 11-28 cassette.
What is the difference between 11-28 and 11 34 cassette?
As shown, the maximum speed is the same with the 11 tooth cog and the 11-28 and 11-30 cassettes share the same gearing combinations until the largest three cogs. However, the 11-34 cassette has easier gearing in every combination except while in the 11 tooth cog.
What is an 11-32 cassette?
That means the outer ring has 50 teeth and the inner ring has 34 teeth. The rear cassette is 11 speed 11-32. This means there are 11 cogs ranging from 11 teeth up to 32 teeth (the exact cogs are 11/12/13/14/16/18…
Can a 11/32 cassette fit?
11-32 does make a substantial difference; remember its the ratio of the front gear to the rear gear that matters. Your lowest gear will be 12.5% lower. Also, you’ll get a wider (and likely more useful) spacing in gearing between changes. You will need a new chain as well, but it should be fine to install.
What cassette is best for hill climbing?
For hill climbing and mountainous terrain, we recommend a road cassette such as the 11-32T SRAM Red 22 XG1190 11 Speed Cassette (A2), or the 11-34T Shimano Ultegra R8000 11 Speed Cassette.
What is the difference between the 11-28 and 11-32 cassette?
In the event you find yourself grinding up a hill at 7 mph, the 11-32 cassette allows you to ride at 81 rpm, while with the 11-28, you’ll be riding at 71 rpm. When you really need it – steep, long hills, at the end of a long ride – this 10 rpm difference is quite noticeable!
What size cassette to pair with a 34-50 chainring?
She currently has an 11-32 cassette mated to a 34-50 chainring which she gets on well with in the area she lives in Yorkshire, with a fair few hills around. She says a lot of the new bikes she is looking at have 11-28 cassettes and has asked what difference it would make to go with one of these.
How much difference is there between an 11-25 and 11-32?
Quite a big difference, if she regularly uses the 32, then going back to a 28 will feel tough. I notice a big difference moving from 11-25 to 11-28. 11-32 anytime, much easier on hills. 11-32 anytime, much easier on hills.
How many cogs in a 9 speed cassette?
The answer to the OP’s question may be different depending to how many cogs she has in her cassette. A typical 9-speed 11-32 cassette will probably have 11-13-15-17-19-21-24-28-32 cogs, giving sensible gaps throughout the range.