https://www.wolftoothcomponents.com/products/roadlinkI have just put an 11-36 on my 10 speed , there is s gizmo called a Wolfs Tooth that allows you to do this , I have similar probs climbing ,
Edit , it allows you to use your normal d’lr to clear large rings
It works because a mech doesn't have a speed, it just sits where the shifter tells it to. Your shifter speed needs to match your cassette ( *although 8 speed shift will.work with 7 speed cassette but with a spare "click")You can do even better than a 34 if you change your rear derailleur too! I had the same problem on my 10 speed cyclocross bike so I changed the little ring to a 34 (it had been a 36) and put a 12-36 10-speed cassette on. To get that to work I put a 9-speed XT mountain bike mech on. NOTE - 9-speed! The cable pull of a 10-speed shifter happens to match the 9-speed MTB mech and those can cope with much larger cogs.
It IS true that the gaps between gears are significantly bigger than before but it was a price that I needed to pay when using a double chainset. Most of my other bikes have tighter cassettes but triple chainsets to get my grovelling gears.
Here it is after the changes ...
View attachment 413820
It will move the jockey wheel away from the sprocket, but it won’t adjust the chain whip, so if your chain rings and sprocket combo take you over your drive train capacity with your current cage length, you’ll still choke the mech. I’m sure it’ll be fine though.Yep , I’ve just got a chain today , I’ll post on here when and if all all is good , the mech in Pearsons , Sheen said it was do -able , but at its limit on a 36r ring ,
There is more to it than that - the shifter pulls a certain amount of cable per click. The derailleur moves a certain distance for that cable pull. In the case of the 10-speed Shimano road shifter and the 9-speed Shimano mountain bike rear mech, the movement is acceptably close to the spacing between sprockets on a 10-speed Shimano cassette.It works because a mech doesn't have a speed, it just sits where the shifter tells it to. Your shifter speed needs to match your cassette ( *although 8 speed shift will.work with 7 speed cassette but with a spare "click")
We are in violent agreement, they are both 1.7 pull ratios (as is pretty much all Shimano rear mechs from 10 speed and below group sets, road or mountain) which was my previous point, it's a misnomer talking about X speed mechs, we should really talk about pull ratios.There is more to it than that - the shifter pulls a certain amount of cable per click. The derailleur moves a certain distance for that cable pull. In the case of the 10-speed Shimano road shifter and the 9-speed Shimano mountain bike rear mech, the movement is acceptably close to the spacing between sprockets on a 10-speed Shimano cassette.