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http://www.cervelo.com/en/bikes/r-series/r2.html A new colour for the R2
Why will things not be made better? Maybe the parts are machined to higher tolerances? It isnt just the materials that make something better and surely if something (as an example the cassette) is made from a harder wearing material (titanium and carbon for dura ace) it will last longer and be stiffer even though it is lighter?
1.105 is not only lighter than Ultegra, so that argument is only part of it. It shifts better, is stiffer and is arguably better made and should therefore last longer. 300 grams of weight saving is also hardly sniffed at in my opinion, as it is with many others.
Neither carbon nor titanium is harder wearing than steel. Ironically the hardest-wearing sprockets are the cheaper steel ones.Why will things not be made better? Maybe the parts are machined to higher tolerances? It isnt just the materials that make something better and surely if something (as an example the cassette) is made from a harder wearing material (titanium and carbon for dura ace) it will last longer and be stiffer even though it is lighter?
So Claris is as smooth to operate as Dura Ace? 5700 is not the same functionality as 6700. I have read many reviews that state the 5700 is stiffer. Anyway I will not argue that point or about the more expensive stuff being better made, but as a machinest I know how the,better, lighter materials are harder to machine and hold tolerances (shimano have stated that the tolerances are tighter as the groupsets get more expensive) As I have seen in other posts you are like a dog with a bone when you get into a discussion and suck the joy out of cycling!
Neither carbon nor titanium is harder wearing than steel. Ironically the hardest-wearing sprockets are the cheaper steel ones.
Tolerances is a big word in marketing. Brochure writers love it, but perhaps you can give us examples of where the tolerances of Dura Acer over 105 would be better?
Steel covers a very wide variety of alloys, so all titanium alloys are not as hard wearing as all steels? A standard uncoated EN1A steel would last longer than 6al4v titanium? I think it is the chrome coating on the steel sprockets that gives them long life.
I do not have the manufacturing drawings that shimano use for their items, but as an example the sprockets on the cassette could be machined to +/-0.025mm on one and +/- 0.25mm on another (which is an accepted general machining tolerance) This may not sound like much of a difference, but try putting things together with both tolerances and see which one goes together easily and lasts longer. Same thing in the levers, mechs and chainset, if the parts are made with closer tolerances, they will work better with less slack, giving a better operation and last longer. Try machining to +/- 0.025mm and see how much more difficult everything is to make than +/-0.1mm and you will see why costs rise, especially when the difference in materials is steel and something a little more exoitic like a stainless steel or titanium. At the end of the day I am only guessing at the tolerances, there may not be a difference, but I would find it highly unlikely they use the same for everything, even in Japan.
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OK, let's settle this for once and all. According to my digital beautyometer, the Ultegra crank is 3,8 times more beautiful than the 105 crank. Period.
According to my Wrongometer, you are off the scale wrong. One a scale of 1 to 10, your wrongness measures 11.5. Lots of likes will confirm.I think your Beautyometer needs recalibrating - should be reading at least MINUS 3.8 not 3.8 positive!
It's a Pug ugly (sorry Pugs but good looking you ain't) thing with all the grace and beauty of a week old hunk of road kill.
I plugged that image into the Yellow Saddle Lab's Beautyrometer and only got a low-level reading. Very similar to that of a dirty chain image I use for calibration.If we are talking aesthetics only, Shimano has nothing like this
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