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41 comments
Generally no, but it'd help me avoid that horrible sinking feeling going up a steep climb, trying to shift and finding I've got no gears left to go down!
Little Red Riding Hood? That's surely Goldilocks? But I agree, I think gear displays are largely unnecessary. Also is it just me or does the shifting look really slow to anyone else? Or is it just because of the low cadence in the videos? It would be nice to see it shift under power.
Surely that's Goldilocks? I don't come on here to see Fairy Tales taken liberty with.
Goldilocks...
It might work superbly. But they forgot to make it PRETTY! Form and function, innit?
That could be deliberate. There's an old saying in engineering design about how to make a product look efficient; "It don't work, but at least it's ugly".
Logo and video brought to you from the 1980's
I can see why you'd want to launch a 12-speed on 12/12/12 but don't understand the 'remote'. Does that make it easier to service?
Wireless transmission - perfect for when you want to control the gearshifts on someone else's bike.
Or when the legs that are pedalling the bike are not directly attached to the upper body. Leave your torso/arms/head in the warm and dry car following close behind!
Or for when some bright spark comes up with handlebars that maintain their position via magnetic levitation above the bike - you don't want pesky cables ruining the look!
Or have I missed the point?!
By the same token, why have wireless cycle computers?
I guess the point is that you can have nice clean lines; you don't have to build frames with internal cable routing; you can keep lines clean when retro-fitting to frames that don't have internal routes; you can easily have multiple shift buttons (e.g., I ride both in the drops and on aero bars. When on the aero bars, I'd love to be able to shift without taking a hand off); replacement/maintenance is quick and easy (no faffing with disconnecting cables); potential to integrate in the future with a cycle computer (which could tell you which gear you were in at any point - something you might forget when you've got 12 to choose from...)
Sounds pretty interesting to me. Would love to get a sense of price cf. the other offerings. Other question would be real life reliability. Seems Di2 is pretty solid. Tiso groupset would need to be robust and wireless link not susceptible to interference (esp. in situations where you were riding with other Tiso users)
Also entertained by the hacking possibilities of wireless. Just imagine being able to control other competitors' gear changes when they were least expecting! Imagine wireless security will be good, but the idea is still amusing.
Don't know anything at all about Tiso (although looking at their website, I think I recall having seen their colourful upgrade kits available to buy somewhere). Are their components any good?
I'd also want their cassettes to be compatible with Shimano freehubs, but appreciate that it may be a bit of a tall order getting a 12-speed in the space that a Shimano 10 speed currently takes.
One to follow in any case. Look forward to reading the first reviews...
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