swansonj
Guru
There's an interesting thread at the moment about whether single chainring setups are a marketing gimmick or here to stay. But it seems to me that's just one instance of a new innovation. If you buy new bikes every few years, you probably don't mind choosing a new trend only to discover in a few years it has dropped from popularity. But if you buy bikes to last, it would be helpful to know which of the latest trends are likely to last.
Integrated brake/gear levers; cassettes instead of freewheels; Aheadsets instead of quill stems; these all seem to be here to stay.
Square taper bottom brackets certainly displaced cotters, but are they now permanently displaced by new bearing designs?
26 instead of 27" wheels seemed to come but are now going again? Elliptical chainrings have never lasted?
Disk brakes and carbon frames both seem here to stay but without completely displacing what went before.
Tubeless tyres? through axles? single chainrings? electric shifting?
Here to stay or gone tomorrow? How do you judge?
Integrated brake/gear levers; cassettes instead of freewheels; Aheadsets instead of quill stems; these all seem to be here to stay.
Square taper bottom brackets certainly displaced cotters, but are they now permanently displaced by new bearing designs?
26 instead of 27" wheels seemed to come but are now going again? Elliptical chainrings have never lasted?
Disk brakes and carbon frames both seem here to stay but without completely displacing what went before.
Tubeless tyres? through axles? single chainrings? electric shifting?
Here to stay or gone tomorrow? How do you judge?