This blog records various activities that my wife and I enjoy within one day's drive of our cabin on Lake Norfork in the Arkansas Ozarks. Of course, many of these activities take place right on the lake outside our window, so the earliest entry begins with a little factual information (culled from various web sites) about the lake and its history.
Sunday, June 2, 2019
RIP Nashbar Carbon CR4
Just over four years ago I wrote a glowing review of my then-new Nashbar CR4 carbon road bike. It has been a very good bike, but after 13,606 miles I am putting it on the shelf. I still stand by the statements I made about the bike in that review, but I can now add that the frame has one fatal flaw -- a flaw that, sadly, might be quite common on newer road bikes.
The CR4 has a "replaceable" derailleur hanger. And that part is made out of light-weight aluminum. I am not a powerhouse sprinter by any means, yet I have broken that hanger three times. One time there was little damage -- just the cost of replacing the hanger. The next time it broke when I was pedaling up a hill and the force of the pedal stroke bent the rear derailleur. The third time I was cruising downhill at more than 20 mph. The hanger broke. The rear derailleur swung down into my spokes. And I was left with a broken derailleur hanger, a wrecked derailleur, four broken spokes on my rear wheel, and (perhaps) a broken chain stay on the carbon frame! All this -- plus coming close to a very dangerous crash -- because the bike is specced with an aluminum derailleur hanger! Please! I understand that a broken hanger might be better than a broken frame, but in this case the broken hanger probably caused the broken frame as well as considerable additional damage.
Not all innovations are improvements. Give me a strong derailleur hanger. Maybe something steel!
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