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Budget brands for gears in India


What are the possible upgrades for a 40-year-old Bottecchia 10 Speed? Fuji Thrill shimano gearsWhat's the easiest way to add gears to my single speed?Gmc Denali - good bike on a 200 budget?Gears on a singlespeed frameUpgrade cranks, chain, gears on a Carrera Vengeance MTBMaxing out on gearsWhat are the good bicycles available in IndiaIssue with the gears?10 gears to singlespeed













1















A total newbie here. I'm planning to upgrade a single speed to geared one road/tour bike. I haven't decided the gear system though. I guess I'll decide that upon availability of the parts.



Well, I am looking for a budget but reliable alternative to Shimano brand gears.



I live in India. Can anyone suggest some other brands? Also are there any local companies?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

    – yollooool
    6 hours ago











  • It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

    – Andrew Henle
    6 hours ago













  • Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

    – Criggie
    21 mins ago
















1















A total newbie here. I'm planning to upgrade a single speed to geared one road/tour bike. I haven't decided the gear system though. I guess I'll decide that upon availability of the parts.



Well, I am looking for a budget but reliable alternative to Shimano brand gears.



I live in India. Can anyone suggest some other brands? Also are there any local companies?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

    – yollooool
    6 hours ago











  • It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

    – Andrew Henle
    6 hours ago













  • Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

    – Criggie
    21 mins ago














1












1








1








A total newbie here. I'm planning to upgrade a single speed to geared one road/tour bike. I haven't decided the gear system though. I guess I'll decide that upon availability of the parts.



Well, I am looking for a budget but reliable alternative to Shimano brand gears.



I live in India. Can anyone suggest some other brands? Also are there any local companies?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












A total newbie here. I'm planning to upgrade a single speed to geared one road/tour bike. I haven't decided the gear system though. I guess I'll decide that upon availability of the parts.



Well, I am looking for a budget but reliable alternative to Shimano brand gears.



I live in India. Can anyone suggest some other brands? Also are there any local companies?







road-bike shimano single-speed upgrades modification






share|improve this question









New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago









Argenti Apparatus

35.2k23890




35.2k23890






New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 7 hours ago









KrishKrish

61




61




New contributor




Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Krish is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

    – yollooool
    6 hours ago











  • It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

    – Andrew Henle
    6 hours ago













  • Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

    – Criggie
    21 mins ago



















  • Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

    – yollooool
    6 hours ago











  • It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

    – Andrew Henle
    6 hours ago













  • Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

    – Criggie
    21 mins ago

















Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

– yollooool
6 hours ago





Suntour are the go-to budget brands, and I believe they are BASED in India.

– yollooool
6 hours ago













It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

– Andrew Henle
6 hours ago







It may not be that simple. Is your current frame capable of being upgraded to handle gearing? Does it have a place for a rear derailleur? Can you run shifter cables on it? Is the rear dropout width correct to hold a geared rear wheel, such as currently available 130 or 135 mm? If not, is it a steel frame that can be cold set (otherwise called "bent") to be wider? If it's an aluminum frame and doesn't have wide-ehough rear dropouts, you can't safely bend it.

– Andrew Henle
6 hours ago















Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

– Criggie
21 mins ago





Are you trying to modify a single speed to be a multi-geared bike? Or are you upgrading by replacing the whole bike?

– Criggie
21 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














What’s wrong with Shimano? They offer good range of budget group sets.



SRAM is of course another option.



Do some research on converting s single speed bike to derailleur gears. Single doors bikes typically have narrower rear hub spacing that does not allow for a cassette. They also lack derailleur hangers and cable mounting bosses. You can get over these problems with special parts but it’s not straightforward.






share|improve this answer































    2














    Changing major features of a bike (e.g., drop/flat handlebars, gears/no gears) is rarely an economical option. There are all kinds of compatibility issues (e.g., different drop-out width, nowhere to mount a derailleur, etc.) and overcoming these takes time and money and tends to leave you with a worse bike.



    Usually, the most economical and most effective way of making this kind of major change is to sell the bike you don't want and buy the bike you do want, possibly second-hand.






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      2














      What’s wrong with Shimano? They offer good range of budget group sets.



      SRAM is of course another option.



      Do some research on converting s single speed bike to derailleur gears. Single doors bikes typically have narrower rear hub spacing that does not allow for a cassette. They also lack derailleur hangers and cable mounting bosses. You can get over these problems with special parts but it’s not straightforward.






      share|improve this answer




























        2














        What’s wrong with Shimano? They offer good range of budget group sets.



        SRAM is of course another option.



        Do some research on converting s single speed bike to derailleur gears. Single doors bikes typically have narrower rear hub spacing that does not allow for a cassette. They also lack derailleur hangers and cable mounting bosses. You can get over these problems with special parts but it’s not straightforward.






        share|improve this answer


























          2












          2








          2







          What’s wrong with Shimano? They offer good range of budget group sets.



          SRAM is of course another option.



          Do some research on converting s single speed bike to derailleur gears. Single doors bikes typically have narrower rear hub spacing that does not allow for a cassette. They also lack derailleur hangers and cable mounting bosses. You can get over these problems with special parts but it’s not straightforward.






          share|improve this answer













          What’s wrong with Shimano? They offer good range of budget group sets.



          SRAM is of course another option.



          Do some research on converting s single speed bike to derailleur gears. Single doors bikes typically have narrower rear hub spacing that does not allow for a cassette. They also lack derailleur hangers and cable mounting bosses. You can get over these problems with special parts but it’s not straightforward.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 4 hours ago









          Argenti ApparatusArgenti Apparatus

          35.2k23890




          35.2k23890























              2














              Changing major features of a bike (e.g., drop/flat handlebars, gears/no gears) is rarely an economical option. There are all kinds of compatibility issues (e.g., different drop-out width, nowhere to mount a derailleur, etc.) and overcoming these takes time and money and tends to leave you with a worse bike.



              Usually, the most economical and most effective way of making this kind of major change is to sell the bike you don't want and buy the bike you do want, possibly second-hand.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                Changing major features of a bike (e.g., drop/flat handlebars, gears/no gears) is rarely an economical option. There are all kinds of compatibility issues (e.g., different drop-out width, nowhere to mount a derailleur, etc.) and overcoming these takes time and money and tends to leave you with a worse bike.



                Usually, the most economical and most effective way of making this kind of major change is to sell the bike you don't want and buy the bike you do want, possibly second-hand.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  Changing major features of a bike (e.g., drop/flat handlebars, gears/no gears) is rarely an economical option. There are all kinds of compatibility issues (e.g., different drop-out width, nowhere to mount a derailleur, etc.) and overcoming these takes time and money and tends to leave you with a worse bike.



                  Usually, the most economical and most effective way of making this kind of major change is to sell the bike you don't want and buy the bike you do want, possibly second-hand.






                  share|improve this answer













                  Changing major features of a bike (e.g., drop/flat handlebars, gears/no gears) is rarely an economical option. There are all kinds of compatibility issues (e.g., different drop-out width, nowhere to mount a derailleur, etc.) and overcoming these takes time and money and tends to leave you with a worse bike.



                  Usually, the most economical and most effective way of making this kind of major change is to sell the bike you don't want and buy the bike you do want, possibly second-hand.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 1 hour ago









                  David RicherbyDavid Richerby

                  11.9k33461




                  11.9k33461






















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