The Crofted Crest
Veteran
Is there a system that automatically shifts gear up or down depending on your speed or pressure on pedals or somesuch?
I've never heard of one but imagine someone, somewhere will have dreamt it up.Is there a system that automatically shifts gear up or down depending on your speed or pressure on pedals or somesuch?
I've never heard of one but imagine someone, somewhere will have dreamt it up.
One only has to ride di2 with the "auto" setting, I don't know its name, to understand this can never work. Shimano in their wisdom introduced a di2 setting which shifts the rear derailleur when the rider shifts the front. It's dreadful.
Gear selection on a bike is about the rider's feel and intuition. No automatic system could better that.
Yes there have been some made, but they've not caught on. I recall reading about one, and the reviewer saying it felt pretty weird to ride.
Optimum cadence depends on you power output, which depends on gradient as well as speed, so it would just be a PITA, and rarely optimum.
I've never heard of one but imagine someone, somewhere will have dreamt it up.
One only has to ride di2 with the "auto" setting, I don't know its name, to understand this can never work. Shimano in their wisdom introduced a di2 setting which shifts the rear derailleur when the rider shifts the front. It's dreadful.
My old car was very expensive and had automatic gears. I hated it. Was always in the wrong gear. Was a horrible delay whilst it was working out what I was trying to do. It was always reactive rather than proactive.
The only time it was vaguely useful is slow moving tedious stop-start traffic.
I wouldn’t want to replicate that on a bike.
I came to post the car comparison from the opposite perspective. I always hated automatic gears until I tried the 8 speed ZF box in my BMW. So creamy smooth that I often forget that there are gears changing. So much more relaxing to drive.
So while I've never ridden a Di2 bike and I'm perfectly happy with mechanical gears on a bike, I'm open minded to the possibility it might work well. I'd heard of the aforementioned Enviolo CVT as a colleague got an e-cargo bike on the C2W scheme.
We too have an automatic volvo, you can’t get them as a manual any more. I find so simple to drive as all you have to do is steer and brake.