11-speed cassette question

Who, other than shimano of course, already makes (or will soon make) Shimano-compatible 11-speed cassettes for road use?

http://www.bikerumor.com/2012/12/12/interchange-shimano-campy-11-speed-cassettes-save-your-wheels/

So that would also mean Interloc and Wheels manufacturing.

SRAM have an 11 speed MTB out or coming out. But that 42 tooth big cog might be too much for a Dura Ace rear derailleur.

I don’t think anyone yet, unless you mean 11 speed hubs.

http://www.bikerumor.com/2012/12/12/interchange-shimano-campy-11-speed-cassettes-save-your-wheels/
So that would also mean Interloc and Wheels manufacturing.

Thanks, but I read that. Unfortunately, it is pretty easy to see that those won’t be a perfect fit, even from the pic you can see alignment problems. Which means grade B shifting at best.

And sram’s system is mtb, not gonna work on a TT bike.

Not sure why you don’t want shimano, but if you want to badly enough miche makes individual cogs and spacers. Thinning down the 10sp cogs or spacers should work, but its a lot of work.

SRAM Red will be 11-speed very soon.

Any idea if it will be the same spacing as shimano? Also any idea if srams mtb 11 is the same spacing as shimano 11?

Who, other than shimano of course, already makes (or will soon make) Shimano-compatible 11-speed cassettes for road use?

Eric Sampson (of Sampson Sports) tells me he’ll have all-steel 11-sp cassettes available in a few weeks. I have one of their 10-speed steel cassettes, and it works well.

SRAM Red will be 11-speed very soon.

Timeline?

2014?

Word on the street is that Campy 11 speed cassettes work great. The spacing difference is sub-millimeter.

Word on the street is that Campy 11 speed cassettes work great. The spacing difference is sub-millimeter.

Interesting. In the bike rumor photo, it looks like it is more than that by the time you get to the end of the cassette.

Awesome. I’m sure Shimano would be stoked if people started to run out and buy Campy Chorus cassettes to run on their DA 9000 drivetrains.

http://fc02.deviantart.net/fs71/i/2011/158/c/2/d__oh_by_intoxicavampire-d3i9wg3.png

Any idea if it will be the same spacing as shimano? Also any idea if srams mtb 11 is the same spacing as shimano 11?

You can’t use the SRAM xx1 cassette. It requires a specific free hub/driver that your wheel company has to produce and I highly doubt a road wheel company is going to make it. Also the XX1 cassette is almost 500 bucks retail.

Hopefully Miche will make one soon. I run Super record 11 and run a chorus cassette. I cant stomach the cost of the SR cassette for 75 grams or whatever it is,

Not sure if you were replying to my post but I was curious to know if the xx 1 cassette is the same spacing as shimano11
.

Giant has early-launch 2014 models (which typically hit early to mid summer) spec’d w/ Sram 11.

Are there any spy pics out there of sram 11, or does it look just like the current sram red 2012, but with different drivetrain spacing?

The pics I saw were of a catalog page, but printed off of a printer I think. It looked just like normal “new” Red to me.

i think campy 11ish cassette can be used with shimano.

I was replying. Same spacing or not though, it won’t work on a road or tri bike.

Never said roadbike, but many of the drivers available for the cassette are interchangeable with a road hub cassette and the gripshift could be used at the end of the handlebar (the original gripshift was a road bike part).

The big issue is the front chainring, they are all smaller than most would want, although I know one guy who does loaded touring and has a single 36 CR on the front.