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9 comments
As my Nan would have said, speak as you find.
My only acquaintance with SRAM was three full years of all-weather commuting on cheap X5. It worked faultlessly, never missed a gear and when I sold the bike it looked set for another long period of faithful service.
My SRAM Red Wifli from pre-22 mechs also bit the dust about 3 months ago, brand new, the plastic piece that held the parallelogram in place fell out, first blocking the mech completely, then 2 rides later fell out completely leaving me stranded 30 miles from anywhere. Great customer service gave me full refund, but still leaves a bad taste, especially since I am a huge advocate of SRAM products converting all my campag bikes to SRAM over the past few years. Not good enough on the new versions, SRAM, can do better.
Seriously considered buying a Tarmac Pro with SRAM Red; spoke to LBS mechanic who said "SRAM tend to let their customers test their products". Despite the weight penalty, kinda glad I played it safe with the Ultegra equipped Expert now...
Seriously considered buying a Tarmac Pro with SRAM Red; spoke to LBS mechanic who said "SRAM tend to let their customers test their products". Despite the weight penalty, kinda glad I played it safe with the Ultegra equipped Expert now...
After two recalls, it makes you wonder if SRAM felt they had to rush out the new RED groupset to make up for not having an electric system. I imagine the marketing team might have felt being one of the first to go to hydraulic brakes combined with 11 speed would help them compete against Shimano and Campag's much glitizier electric offerings.
Speaking to bike shops, Avid brakes are not renowned for reliability! Sram rear mechs tend to be "fragile".
I'll stick to Shimano for the MTB and Campagnolo for the road bike. Both seem to make kit that generally works, doesn't break if you look at it. Oh and isn't horrifically expensive for spares!
Too many recalls, too many horror stories from SRAM users. I toyed with the idea of red 22 for a while but the reasons to steer clear just keep piling up.
Having had bad vibes from previous (mtb) SRAM produced equipment, namely some Rockshox forks and an Avid disc brake it's gotta be said, I'm steering very much clear of their products and this would significantly influence my choice of bike in the future. Shimano for me, ta
Well considering that RockShox and Avid are completely different sections of the company, it's a bit ridiculous that you would avoid their shifting mechanisms on the same vote.
I've always hated SRAM shifters. Since the old days with the gripshifts, right up to the late 2000's with their X9, X0 series.
Always felt like shifting through mud.
But I've got Avid brakes and between a now heavily customized Totem and some Lyrics, I've not had a problem with their other stuff. Sure, that Totem isn't as plush as my old manitou, but it's a totally different beast and it does the job just fine - indeed, with lockout and 2 inch travel adjust, it does a few different jobs pretty damn well.
Use your brain first before making sweeping condemnations of unrelated products.