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  2. 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.

  3. Shimano Total Integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimano_Total_Integration

    Shimano STI Dual Control shifter and brake lever: 1. Main lever 2. Release lever A. Pulling the main lever towards the rider applies the brake B. Pushing the main lever towards the center of the bike downshifts one, two or three gears depending on how far the lever is pushed (right hand shifter) or changes from a small chainring to a larger chainring (left hand shifter)

  4. Bicycle chain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_chain

    1976: Shimano briefly made their own 10 pitch Dura-Ace track-specific system with 10 mm (3 ⁄ 8 in) (approximately) pitch from about 1976 [13] to 1980 [14] —called Shimano Dura-Ace 10 pitch. The Shimano 10 pitch system is incompatible with ANSI standard #40 (1/2″) e.g. chains, sprockets and so on, [ 15 ] [ 16 ] and was outlawed by the ...

  5. 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.

  6. Bottom bracket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom_bracket

    A Shimano Octalink v1 Bottom Bracket before fitting. The Octalink system uses a spindle with eight splines. The splines provide a contact area between crank and spindle for an interface. Octalink exists in the marketplace in two variants Octalink v1 and Octalink v2, and the two are not compatible with each other.

  7. Biopace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biopace

    Biopace triple crankset, a non-round crankset The Biopace logo on a chainring. Biopace is a tradename for a type of ovoid bicycle chain ring manufactured by Shimano from 1983 to 1993 [1] [2] The design was intended to help overcome the "dead zone" where the crank arms are vertical and riders have little mechanical advantage.

  8. Compatibility (mechanics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compatibility_(mechanics)

    Compatibility is the study of the conditions under which such a displacement field can be guaranteed. Compatibility conditions are particular cases of integrability conditions and were first derived for linear elasticity by Barré de Saint-Venant in 1864 and proved rigorously by Beltrami in 1886.

  9. Crankset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankset

    A used Shimano chainring, detached from right crank. Chainrings (also called "chain rings", [11] "chainwheels" or "sprockets", although sprocket is used this way mostly in the BMX community [3]) engage the chain to transfer power to the (usually rear) wheel. They usually have teeth spaced to engage every link of the chain as it passes over ...