Oy.  These posts make me long for the days when BB's were sold with axles, 
cups, and bearings as a separate but inclusive "kit".  IIRC, Grant had 
several posts in his early Riv Readers lamenting the advent of cartridge 
bearing BB's in lieu of the old fashioned adjustable type and I don't blame 
him (I may have to peruse the readers to find some of these comments). 
 Except that no one makes them anymore.  It kinda reminds me of what a 
gear-head once told me when I asked him about repacking wheel bearings 
on automobile front axles, "Nobody does it; that's why they've gone to 
sealed cartridge bearings."  So here we are, similarly, in the world of 
cartridge bike BB's whether we like it or not, tossing the old cheap units 
in the trash when they start to go South and/or lauding the high-dollar 
ones for lasting longer.  Have we advanced?  Well, it's kinda like the 
argument that's been hashed back and forth about threadless vs. threaded 
headsets: the one seems to facilitate manufacturing and assembly, the other 
has its place among those who want to take the time and patience to 
properly clean and maintain their bikes.

On Thursday, April 28, 2016 at 4:20:47 PM UTC-5, Gum N Nuts wrote:
>
> What does Riv use for stock bottom brackets? I'm curious because I've had 
> two different ones - one from a fully built-by-riv cheviot and one from a 
> hillborne frameset - completely eat it. The one on the cheviot lasted about 
> two hundred miles, maybe a thousand on the hillborne. No weird weather, 
> sometimes loaded for camping but otherwise pretty normal riding. Replaced 
> with $25 shimanos both times and no further worry after several thousand 
> more miles on each. 
>
> On Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at 1:27:49 PM UTC-7, dstein wrote:
>>
>> Why are more expensive bottom brackets more expensive? What do you gain? 
>> Is it just durability? Or is there any sort of performance gain (ie, does 
>> it roll smoother, faster, etc)?
>>
>> I've worked on most bike parts now minus the bottom bracket and headset. 
>> About to change cranks on my hunqapillar form the Sugino triple (with a 107 
>> or 110 bb) to a White Industries Eno (with a 113 bb). Trying to figure out 
>> if I go w/ the $40 bb on Riv's site? Or a White Industries or something 
>> similar? This bike will see 500-1000 miles a year on dirt and some mud. And 
>> support the occasional overnighter.
>>
>

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