SafetyThird
Senior Member
I'm returning to cycling after a very long layoff. Back in 2006 I was 40 and was a middle of the pack triathlete. Since then I've been through a lot of life changes, cycling/triathlon fell by the wayside and I've lost most of that fitness along with now being a couple of years away from 60. Wanting to finally do something about the loss of fitness, I recently bought a Wahoo Kickr Core and a zwift subscription and am now a month into regularly doing 3 sessions a week on the bike using their Back to Fitness plan which is going well and I'm enjoying.
Looking ahead to the better weather and wanting to get out cycling in the countryside again, I need to change the gearing on the bike. It's still wearing the original standard 53/39 on the front and a 12-25 10-speed cassette on the back. That was fine when I was racing as I was living in a flat country and in the best shape of my life. Now I'm unfit and live in very hilly North Devon and have no chance of getting up the steeper hills on that.
I'm looking at moving to a compact setup of 50/34 which I believe is as simple as changing the front chainrings and I'm also considering changing the cassette to something with a bigger range. The obvious is 12-30 Shimano, which would give me 30-110 gear inches but honestly, even a 12 smallest cog seems more than I'm likely to need given that top speed is never really going to be an issue in the future, and I wondered if something like a Miche Primato 14-30 would be a better option. The Miche cassettes are individually built so I could go even bigger but then I'm into whether the rear mech would cope with it.
Which brings me to hardware and whether what I have will manage those cogs. The bike has early 2000's 105 front and rear derailleurs, an RD 5501 long cage on the back. Shifters are Ultegra flight deck from later as the bike used to be set up with aerobars and bar end shifters but I put it back in road stock a few years ago. How would I find out whether the hardware would manage a 30 tooth or bigger rear cassette?
Would appreciate any advice on choosing something appropriate for on older rider in hilly terrain. Thanks.
Looking ahead to the better weather and wanting to get out cycling in the countryside again, I need to change the gearing on the bike. It's still wearing the original standard 53/39 on the front and a 12-25 10-speed cassette on the back. That was fine when I was racing as I was living in a flat country and in the best shape of my life. Now I'm unfit and live in very hilly North Devon and have no chance of getting up the steeper hills on that.
I'm looking at moving to a compact setup of 50/34 which I believe is as simple as changing the front chainrings and I'm also considering changing the cassette to something with a bigger range. The obvious is 12-30 Shimano, which would give me 30-110 gear inches but honestly, even a 12 smallest cog seems more than I'm likely to need given that top speed is never really going to be an issue in the future, and I wondered if something like a Miche Primato 14-30 would be a better option. The Miche cassettes are individually built so I could go even bigger but then I'm into whether the rear mech would cope with it.
Which brings me to hardware and whether what I have will manage those cogs. The bike has early 2000's 105 front and rear derailleurs, an RD 5501 long cage on the back. Shifters are Ultegra flight deck from later as the bike used to be set up with aerobars and bar end shifters but I put it back in road stock a few years ago. How would I find out whether the hardware would manage a 30 tooth or bigger rear cassette?
Would appreciate any advice on choosing something appropriate for on older rider in hilly terrain. Thanks.