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OPINION

Cheating

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Time's run out and in order to even contemplate completing the Haute Route I've had to resort to cheating. And not by eating a whole Spanish cow.

A rather fine Cannondale Super Six has turned up for me to ride, and it's like cheating. Knocking at the door of weighing 4lbs less than the bike I'm used to playing out on it should make lighter work of things, I've tried doing the sums to work out how much less effort will be required to haul a handful fewer pounds up about 17,000 metres and over 730kms but I've mislaid my slide-rule.

Sadly for a road bike calling itself an 'Elite' model this Super Six has a compact chainset bolted into it. That's cheating too. I don't like compact chainsets, they're fine for other people but I have self-inflicted rational arbitrary reasons to look at them a little regretfully. I'm a tenacious grinder of 'standard' gearing because that's what I use, because that's what I've always used. When I started riding proper bikes a good quarter century ago there was no such thing as 'standard' or 'compact' gears, there were just gears. If you wanted a racing bike it had a 42/52 chainring pairing on the front with a straight-through block on the rear, and you just got on with it. Over the years the sprockets on the back have just about doubled, with the excess being loaded generally towards the end nearest the spokes and number of teeth subtly increased to that which would have you branded as a tourer back-in-the-day, and the 42 on the front might have shrunk a bit to a 39, but that's been countered by the big ring shifting up to a 53. And I'm happy with that. To resort to a compact chainset after all this time would mean that I've given in, given up, stopped trying. If I can't make it up That Hill in That Gear then I know that I'm getting fat and unfit and rather than use new technologies to pander to these inadequacies I'd rather face up to my deficiencies, force myself out on the bike more and struggle back up to that level of fitness that can manage the existing gear ratios I have once again. And I'm not just talking big and puffing my chest out over the gentle undulations of the local roads, I've frequently ridden mountains on a standard chainset, because it's the gears that I have, that I've always had, and survived, I may have struggled here and there, and maybe had to sit down on a hairpin for a cry once or twice, but I've managed, and enjoyed the challenge, afterwards. Essentially it's a private matter of purely personal self-worth and in the hours and miles preceding the arrival of the Cannondale my mind would churn and mull over these thoughts of compact versus standard, a lot, mixing up a bitter sticky mess of bravado, survival, stupidity, ego and mostly hubris. There's a part of me that still wants to use 'proper' gears, just to prove to myself that I still can, that's the part that will be cramping in the gutter, weeping openly, as the other part of me twiddles past in cheats gears whistling a happy tune.

But most importantly, and worst of all, I am going to be cheating on my bike. The bike that I've ridden all my training miles in preparation for this, the bike that I have shared a thousand fun and miserable experiences with, the bike that has been a second home, the bike that has partnered me through sunshine, rain, mud, gravel and snot. The bike that I have continually treated badly and then made good again with love, care and an oily rag. I shall be cheating on her. The bike that makes me smile every time I see her shall be left behind while I dally with something younger and slimmer.

Dirty low-down cheating scum.

Jo Burt has spent the majority of his life riding bikes, drawing bikes and writing about bikes. When he's not scribbling pictures for the whole gamut of cycling media he writes words about them for road.cc and when he's not doing either of those he's pedaling. Then in whatever spare minutes there are in between he's agonizing over getting his socks, cycling cap and bar-tape to coordinate just so. And is quietly disappointed that yours don't He rides and races road bikes a bit, cyclo-cross bikes a lot and mountainbikes a fair bit too. Would rather be up a mountain.

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7 comments

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TomAMoore | 12 years ago
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As a charter member of "old guys who get fat in the winter" club, I remember, dimly,the days of 42/52 and a straight bloc.

It is not "cheating" to embrace compact chainrings and a wider bloc, it is accepting change and growth. yeah, that's right making things easier gettting my old fattish body up th hills is better! not cheating!

Tom
 4

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Dean | 12 years ago
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...but does it have Sportive Geometry®?

Bon chance!

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jforbes004 | 12 years ago
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Hate to sound like a geek, but modern design also means that small sprockets are now smaller. 48*12 gives you the same gear as 52*13 and 48*11 fractionally higher than 52*12. I too started out on 52/42 but use compacts on all my bikes now. With an 11 sprocket versus a 13 when I started, my biggest gear with a compact is bigger than that on my original 52/42 road bike. I have more available at the other end too, and increasingly use them, but probably not the massive difference you would think either. 42*26 equates 34*21. Obviously what we do have now is smaller jumps. 11 sprockets versus 5 25 years ago.

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daviddb | 12 years ago
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Ha-ha

Excellent article with my tea and biscuit. Thanks!

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Bez | 12 years ago
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I'd grudgingly accept a compact if I could have a go on a Super Six* (git!). I'd *even* grudgingly admit that if I was doing the Haute Route then I'd actually ungrudgingly accept a compact.

* I've got a CAAD9; does that make it less like cheating, or is it worse, like having a go on her sister?

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Wooliferkins | 12 years ago
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Make yourself feel better, check the footage of Contador and Millar on Stage 20 of the Giro this year. Contador after his bike change has an Apex rear mech suggesting he's using the 11-32 cassette and Millar looks like he has a SRAM XO long cage which suggests the 12-34 MTB cassette. No cheating just looking after your knees.

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mad_scot_rider | 12 years ago
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Quote:

But most importantly, and worst of all, I am going to be cheating on my bike. The bike that I've ridden all my training miles in preparation for this, the bike that I have shared a thousand fun and miserable experiences with, the bike that has been a second home, the bike that has partnered me through sunshine, rain, mud, gravel and snot. The bike that I have continually treated badly and then made good again with love, care and an oily rag. I shall be cheating on her. The bike that makes me smile every time I see her shall be left behind while I dalliance with something younger and slimmer.

Love it! You tramp.

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