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5 comments
53/39 with a 12/25 cassette is really standard but 50/36 (or 34) compact with 11/28 give a bigger top and much smaller bottom. Better unless you need a 90+/-1 cadence and need a cog with 16 teeth!!
Thanks folks; I'll do as alihisgreat suggests and just stick the chainring on first, and not worry too much about the 12 cog in any eventuality. I can put off buying a chain whip and lockring tool at least :p
Keep the old cassette as a spare. You can swap it back on if you find that you never use the lower gears once you've got used to the new bike and gearing. Given that loads of people ride compact double chainrings of 50/34 because the majority of new road bikes are supplied with them as standard you aren't losing much by ditching that 12 tooth sprocket. 53x13 gives you 107.1 gear inches whereas 50x12 would give 109.5 which isn't a great deal of difference at all. Either one will get you well past 30mph before you spin out. If you are new to this game I'd suggest that's plenty fast enough and would take a big effort to sustain on the flat. 39x26 will definitely help on the bumps.
Enjoy the new bike!
there are hills in Norfolk?
53-39 is more conventional 'double' gearing anyway I think -> I.e. what today's off the shelf double bikes tend to come with.
I'd just fit the chainring to start with and see how it goes for two weeks.. then change the cassette if you need to.
THEY'RE THERE IF YOU LOOK FOR THEM!
My favourite casette ATM is 11-28.
NB. The tour of Britain comes through my local suffolk roads, and they've managed to find a KOM hill (!!).
I looked it up, and it turn out to be one of my Strava segments (that I have the KOM on
) so lets hope that noone who uses strava turns up.