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Messages - raisinberry777

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1
Some impressions here on Sensah Phi. Nothing on the forum here yet (and nothing much on the internet generally) so some thoughts below. I've been rebuilding my spare/trainer bike so it's been a good opportunity to try some Aliexpress parts. I had a Shimano 5600 RD and a couple of different FDs about so I thought I'd try Sensah Phi to bring it all together with a variety of other budget 10 speed parts.

As a small-handed rider, I was looking forward to repurposing Shimano's 10 speed parts without having to resort to their shifters. I've always hated the ergonomics of both the 7800/6600/5600 levers (cable out the side) and the 7900/6700/5700 so the idea of having modern ergonomic shifters that worked with older parts was appealing.

The TL;DR is that these shifters pretty much do what they say on the tin. It's a version of the Sensah shifters that works with the Shimano 1.4 actuation ratio (basically everything 8/9/10 speed except Tiagra 4700 / GRX 400)

I had two different front derailleurs on hand to try - 5800 (11-speed 105) and 3500 (9-speed Sora). First I tried the 5800 but it didn't feel quite right to begin with. Noting that the Sensah Phi shifter seems to be a very similar design to the 7900/6700/5700 FD (see below), I decided to try the 9 speed Sora FD - this had a better feeling right from the get-go. I'm not sure if the FD cable pull is the same as other Sensah levers.



Thoughts:

Rear shifting
Excellent - works nicely, easy enough to good feel to make sure you're not shifting the wrong way, action is light, no issues at all. Feels at least as good as mechanical SRAM used to.

Front shifting
Meh to reasonable. The actual shifting performance is okay, but it's just a weird design. The front shifter has 4 spots (so 3 clicks) - assuming it's meant to be like Shimano, there should be two spots for each ring. The difference with Shimano is, particularly for going from big ring back to small ring - you can either to the light press just to trim (one position), or do a normal press to go down to the inner ring. With the Sensah shifter you can only move down one position at a time, so you basically have to do two small taps to drop down to the inner ring. It works fine, but it's just weird. Is there any documentation or guide to what the positions of the FD are meant to be - is it meant to be like Shimano?

Shifter ergonomics
Great, basically the same as current Shimano mechanical. Heaps better than old Shimano levers. Adjustable brake reach is nice for me with small hands. Hoods fit nice and tight.

End result


Chinese parts on this build:
Sensah Phi shifters - as above
Senicx PR3 cranks - needed a 1mm spacer on the NDS (not supplied) when used with a Shimano BBR-60 BSA threaded BB. Seller sent a 165mm instead of the 170mm I ordered. Shifting on the chainrings seems nice though and it's always good to have cranks that are easy to put a power meter on.
YBN 10 speed chain - seems to work just fine - put it through the ultrasonic cleaner and am using Squirt drip wax on it.
Sensah 10 speed cassette, 11-28 - would like to go more but that's the max the 5600 derailleur will allow. Works just fine.
OG-Evkin bar tape - basically a copy of Lizard Skins, not quite as good as the real deal but not far off. The key test will be longevity though.
West Biking SPD-SL pedals - surprisingly good given the price ($14 USD). Haven't tried the included cleats but action with genuine Shimano cleats feels much like Shimano. Had to disassemble to grease the axle (was totally dry) and as a result movement was very slow on unboxing but now it's greased (and the grease has had a chance to move itself around) it's been fine.
Velobuild VBR-016 - bought this back in 2014 and it was my main bike from 2014-2020. Obviously it's been surpassed by many other Chinese frames since but it's still a nice bike, well constructed and easy to work with (threaded BB, easy to find headset bearings). Tyre clearance is typical of the time, 25mm at the rear is the absolute maximum. The pictured version on the site are the original finished pics of my frame.

2
One thing to be wary of - it seems like Wheeltop are not providing direct assistance for groupsets not bought from their website. There's a marketing rep in the Wheeltop EDS Facebook group that keeps posting messages such as this:


3
Cyclocross Frames, Wheels & Components / Re: LTWOO eGR
« on: May 17, 2024, 07:01:29 AM »
So, now I’m wondering what calipers might be compatible with the LTWOO levers. I know that early on they were bundling with other makers calipers, so I’m guessing the piston ratios are probably common. Maybe Shimano compatible since they went with mineral oil. If so, that would be great since apparently pretty much all Shimano calipers are compatible including across road and mountain groups.

Basically any Shimano caliper should work - pick up a set of their basic MTB ones for your post mount fork.

4
Inspired by sharks? The chinese are now doing meaningless bullshit marketing, they are learning so fast!
Is it 1x only?  :( No word on clearance or capacity, would be nice if you could purchase the gravel RD with road levers and FD and run something like 50-34 11-42

Looking at the model names, there will be 'GS' and 'SGS' versions of both the carbon and aluminium rear derailleurs. Clearly they're ripping off Shimano's MTB/gravel naming scheme here, where 'GS' is a medium cage and 'SGS' is a long cage.

The models listed are:
GX-RX6700-GS
GX-RX6700-SGS
GX-RX7701-GS
GX-RX7701-SGS

In Shimano's latest 12-speed GRX (for example), the GS supports up to a 10-45 cassette, and SGS is used for 10-51. Looks like a similar scheme will be used here.

There's also a TX-R7101-SGS derailleur mentioned there - TX is for road, but SGS is long cage. It might be that this is a wide-range 2x option.

5
Cyclocross Frames, Wheels & Components / Re: Which gravel wheels?
« on: May 07, 2024, 03:58:38 PM »
If reliability is the key criteria, get one of the OEMs like FarSports to build you up some wheels with Sapim CX-Ray spokes, Sapim nipples and DT Swiss 350 hubs, then pretty much any bike shop in the world has access to spares for you. I got my wheel specced like that from Farsports for $850 USD shipped to Australia (including no spoke holes). Tubeless set up was extremely easy (just put tyre on and pump up with track pump).

6
Certainly interesting if they can get a product to market and throw some good support behind it (support historically for Magene products seems... lacklustre). For example, see this thread:

https://chinertown.com/index.php?topic=4221.0

The P505 certainly seems to have been a success for them though and they've at least shown with that that they can make a reliable product.

7
From LTwoo's 2024-25 catalogue, looks like all the rim brake levers will be refreshed to match the design of the hydraulic levers (with the Campagnolo-style thumb shifter than the older Shimano Sora-style thumb lever in the awkward spot).



Mechanical derailleurs getting a refresh too - different graphics but hard to see what's changed mechanically.



R9 gets the holographic decal treatment



More minimal design continues down through the product line:



A slight graphical refresh on the gravel rear derailleurs but looks mostly the same



Still no sign of an electronic rim brake lever so Wheeltop likely to be the only Chinese player in that space for a little while unless Sensah springs a surprise.

8
Another interesting tidbit from that catalogue, looks like (probably as expected) we should see new ER9 soon to match new ERX.


9
So the ER9 can be set up with 12 speed? I always see it advertised as an 11 speed groupset.

Yes - you select the number of speeds in the app when setting up - it supports at least 10/11/12 (maybe more?).

10
Review of the new ERX from Local Alien / CLIFF on YouTube:



The new FD cage is a different shape from before. He's reporting less chain drops from front shifting compared to previous ERX.

11
Road Bike Frames, Wheels & Components / Re: VeloBuild VB-R-268 frame
« on: April 04, 2024, 04:41:40 AM »
I've got the FarSports Gravel wheels that seem to fit your requirements, 24mm internal width, 30mm external width, 50mm deep, built with Sapim CX-Ray spokes on Bitex hubs, final weight around 1450g and cost around 700 USD. I got them without any internal holes so no need to rim tape to run them tubeless with UD matte, stickerless finish, however you can also get them in gloss and other fininshes. 7,000 km's put on them so far and they've been great!

To add to that, I got the same wheelset but with DT Swiss 350 hubs instead (849 USD in total) and they've been excellent. 1396g for 50mm deep, no internal holes made tubeless setup extremely easy.

12
I only see these aliexpress.com/item/32825340170.html at 530€ shipped without chainrings, I can get rotor crankset for cheaper. That's pretty bad when 105 with 4iiii is 300€ and not much heavier around 730g
Magene P505 and Zrace RX are also both more expensive and i've heard bad things about both (cranksets, not PM itself)
Such a shame how uncompetitive the chinese are for midrange cranksets imo. It should be right up their alley with casting and milling but nobody is doing affordable, modular and not ridiculously expensive sets.

What about the Sigeyi Axo and their rebranded Fovno Aurora Pro?

https://www.sigeyishop.com/product-category/power-meter-crankset/

13
Delays on the aluminium rim-brake version to July 2024:

https://twitter.com/wheeltopjapan/status/1770967843984773405

[Notice and Apology of Delivery Delay]
There will be a delay in the delivery of the aluminum grade TX-RA6100, which is compatible with wire pull brakes, in the EDS TX series.

▼ Applicable products
TX-RA6100

▼ Scheduled release date
July 2024

▼ Reason for delay: Due to production adjustments due to the sudden increase in demand for EDS worldwide.

14
Came so close to pulling the trigger on one of those from the same retailer.  I will wait till mid-summer or early fall and pick one of the rim brake sets up after there are more end user reviews.

That's my strategy too - once a few more are in end users' hands and there's some real-world feedback I might consider the rim brake version on a spare bike.

15
Road Bike Frames, Wheels & Components / Re: Elita One Saddle
« on: March 18, 2024, 03:16:53 AM »
I've been using this one for just over a year now:

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005027020275.html?spm=a2g0o.order_detail.order_detail_item.3.63eef19cFqQW4Y

I love it - favourite saddle I've used so far (out of many!). It's quite flexy, but no signs of cracking or anything like that.

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