You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more
I know it's a question that's been asked multiple times, but I've been out of the game for a few years.
I have the option of a couple of bikes, one has 2023 XT and one has 2023 SRAM X01 ASX Eagle. if they were both mechanical, I'd have no qualms going for Shimano as that's what i'm used to, etc. etc.. But, the lure of electronic shifting is getting to me. I have 8 year old DA Di2 on the road bike which has always been faultless. Can anyone give me any real world feedback on the wireless SRAM X01 ASX please?
I know my mate had an AXS (X01 I think) rear mech replaced under warranty - not sure what the problem was though (he then killed the new one on a rock. Doh!)
It made me laugh that my whole Microshift groupset cost only slightly more than his chain!
Had XX1 AXS x2 for 5 years now, both faultless. Same with 2x GX AXS I’ve had for 1 and 2 years.
Not going back to cables.
SRAM AXS every single time.
Mine's been utterly faultless since I first started running it in early 2019. Two bikes are now running the new T-Type stuff and it's even better again.
SRAM AXS is brilliant. Easy to set up and easy to adjust. Battery last ages too. Replacement/spare batteries are not expensive.
Shimano is also great but no wireless option. If I had Shimano I'd go for mechanical over Di2 just to avoid all the silly tin wires and annoying battery.
I’m a huge Shimano fan, have it on all my bikes and if the SRAM was mechanical I’d say Shimano no worries. Be tempted by the ASX though, especially if the rest of the kit is similar between the bikes.
I do like Shimano shifters and dislike the Dub standard, but if someone is offering 2023 X01 AXS and 2023 XT at the same price, there's only one answer unless the rest of the XT bike was massively better.
Have converted all our bikes over to SRAM AXS now.....
Axs for me, absolutely fantastic system. The xt stuff I've experienced has a cheese like rear mech cage - can be straightened by hand without much effort.
I'm not a fan of SRAM mechanical - it's probably bias from being on shimano so long.
I have GX AXS on my MTB, and 105 Di2 on my road bike. Both work pretty flawlessly. You have to plug the wireless Di2 brifters in to update the firmware which is a bit of a ball ache, otherwise it's all done on the app.
My next gravel bike will have a GX AXS rear - having a dinner plate low gear on a loaded bike will be the mutts...
I have AXS on both my gravel bikes, and on my eMTB, and di2 on both my road bikes (one regular one eroad) . I prefer the SRAM kit.
Low end: go Shimano. High end: SRAM. I’ve an XX1 mechanical groupset from 2018 and it’s been faultless. Now on AXS and despite some early reservations, it’s superb.
The biggest surprise for me has been the lifespan of the chain and cassettes which is / was so much better than Shimano. Expensive when you do eventually have to replace but I can live with that. AXS fitted in February and 2k miles later, no noticeable wear on the chain.
Done 9K KM on a GX AXS mech and it’s superb. Zero issues.
Thanks for the feedback all, it sounds pretty unanimous!
I've not tried AXS due to the amount of mechs I smash into oblivion
Purely mechanical, I'm Shimano on all my bikes - if just for the shifters. I have had plenty of SRAM mechanical for comparison - and the mechs sometimes shatter when brushing a blade of grass
Simple decision.... Do you want electrical shit on your bike ?
(during daytime)
Mechanic I've used both shimano and sram across 30 odd bikes crossing 3+ decades and tbh I've not really felt they're that much different. Though should say this is on the higher end groupsets - XT/XTR GX/XO the lower stuff on both companies is quite poor really.
I'd love AXS but its just way too overpriced currently.
What type of bike?
I'd have no qualms going electric if it was on a gravel/light duties bike but given my history I'm not sure I would do that for anything that would see rougher tracks.
Having ran GX / X01 mechanical for the past couple of years, I think I would find it hard to move back to Shimano now.
Still not ready to make the leap to electric though, despite all the positive noise.
If I was building a budget ride, Deore would be my go to though.
Only mark against SRAM for me is cost of replacements. GX cassette is around £150 whereas SLX is around £65 even XT can be had for £95
I’ll only have Shimano on all my bikes (road, gravel, MTB), mainly because I much prefer the brakes. Cost of replacement parts also a factor. But I’ll concede that AXS works well and the shifting is just as good as Shimano.
reeksy
What type of bike?
It's a full suspension MTB.
thegeneralist
Simple decision…. Do you want electrical shit on your bike ?
Good point, put I have Di2 on the road bike which is lectric, not issues (it is a few years old now and tech has come a long way)
TBF I’ve had Shimano SLX microspline cassettes last just as long as my last GX.