loamoaf
Active Member
- Region
- USA
Nice! Glad to hear it wasn't too tricky to put in. You can follow this Park Tools guide to make sure your're all good - they limit screws & indexing should be good if you were able to swap the cage with the derailleur on the bike (wheel & chain off, cable still attached), otherwise you'll have to go through the whole setup. Looks like you'll be able to get the guide pulley way closer to the 11T now, you've got a pretty big gap there.
I fiddled around with my M8000 a little bit and removed the EX1 from my bike. I'll be honest the SRAM piece looks more 'technologically advanced' or 'modern' with it's little cable pulley & guide and adjustment screw placement - a little more streamlined behind the hanger - but the Shimano is lighter, a little slimmer overall, and is definitely more elgant. I haven't ridden Shimano components in around 10 years and before it wasn't higher-end stuff like the XT. While I like that the SRAM has a lock button that you can use to lock the cage forward for easier wheel removal or chain removal, the Shimano has an adjustable/serviceable clutch that becomes so crazy stiff when you flip the switch to 'on'
I'll be honest, I mostly got the pulleys because they look cool, I had to stop myself from also getting their stem cap too because I already bought a different one lol. The M8000 has two 11T pulleys and only the lower one on the Garbaruk set is larger (16T) so I believe the only benefit (other than looking sweet and shaving some grams from my wallet) is a little smoother shifting from giving the derailleur a little more leverage & clearance. It's probably placebo though. "I spent money on it so it has make me less bad at this"
FWIW the SRAM EX1 does use larger pulleys (12T + 14T) and they state these help with shifting over a wider range. I use this as evidence to justify my bad spending habit
I fiddled around with my M8000 a little bit and removed the EX1 from my bike. I'll be honest the SRAM piece looks more 'technologically advanced' or 'modern' with it's little cable pulley & guide and adjustment screw placement - a little more streamlined behind the hanger - but the Shimano is lighter, a little slimmer overall, and is definitely more elgant. I haven't ridden Shimano components in around 10 years and before it wasn't higher-end stuff like the XT. While I like that the SRAM has a lock button that you can use to lock the cage forward for easier wheel removal or chain removal, the Shimano has an adjustable/serviceable clutch that becomes so crazy stiff when you flip the switch to 'on'
I'll be honest, I mostly got the pulleys because they look cool, I had to stop myself from also getting their stem cap too because I already bought a different one lol. The M8000 has two 11T pulleys and only the lower one on the Garbaruk set is larger (16T) so I believe the only benefit (other than looking sweet and shaving some grams from my wallet) is a little smoother shifting from giving the derailleur a little more leverage & clearance. It's probably placebo though. "I spent money on it so it has make me less bad at this"
FWIW the SRAM EX1 does use larger pulleys (12T + 14T) and they state these help with shifting over a wider range. I use this as evidence to justify my bad spending habit