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  2. Shimano Deore XT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimano_Deore_XT

    Deore XT is a mountain and touring bike groupset first introduced by Shimano in 1983. [1] It was Shimano's first mountain bike groupset, based on their existing Deore touring groupset, and it consisted of a triple-, double- or single chainring crankset, front and rear derailleurs, handlebar-mounted "finger" shifters, cantilever brakes, and large-flange hubs. [1]

  3. Derailleur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derailleur

    Campagnolo Super Record rear derailleur (1983) Shimano XT rear derailleur on a mountain bike Pulley wheels for a rear derailleur. The rear derailleur has two functions: it moves the chain between rear sprockets while taking up chain slack caused by moving to a smaller sprocket at the rear or a smaller chainring by the front derailleur.

  4. Shimano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimano

    Shimano, Inc. (株式会社シマノ, Kabushiki-gaisha Shimano), originally Shimano Iron Works (島野鐵工所) and later Shimano Industries, Inc. (島野工業株式会社), is a Japanese multinational manufacturing company for cycling components, fishing tackle and rowing equipment, which also produced golf supplies until 2005 and snowboarding gear until 2008.

  5. Bicycle gearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_gearing

    A Rohloff Speedhub hub gear A Shimano XT rear derailleur on a mountain bike A bicycle gearbox with chain tensioner. Bicycle gearing is the aspect of a bicycle drivetrain that determines the relation between the cadence, the rate at which the rider pedals, and the rate at which the drive wheel turns.

  6. Hyperglide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglide

    Hyperglide is the name given by cycling component manufacturer Shimano to a sprocket design in their bicycle derailleur tooth cassette systems. [1] It varies gear tooth profiles, and/or pins along the faces of freewheel or cassette sprockets, or between the chainrings in a crankset , to ease shifting between them.

  7. Electronic gear-shifting system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_gear-shifting...

    In 2001 Shimano introduced a set of trekking components called Di2 (Digital Integrated Intelligence), which included electronic shifting and automatic adaption of front and rear derailleur to riding speed. During the 2000s both Shimano and Campagnolo (2005) [6] experimented with electronic shifting in professional cycle races. [3]

  8. Crankset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankset

    This provides nearly the same lower gear ratios as a triple but without the need for a third chainring, a triple front derailleur and a long cage rear derailleur. Both Shimano and Campagnolo recommend and sell front derailleurs specifically designed for compact cranksets, claiming better shifting.

  9. Shimano Nexus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimano_Nexus

    Inter 8 - The Inter 8 has interval percentages between the gears of 22, 16, 14, 18, 22, 16, 14, and a total range of 307%, comparable to a road bike derailleur gear systems, but as the other Nexus products, it is designed and intended for urban commuter use. The hub comes in a variety of versions, weighing between 1550 and 2040 grams stripped.