A perennial gearing question

531 pro

rBotM Winner
This might be a little off topic, but i'm taking my retro road bike up alp duez this summer and i'm getting a bit confused about gearing?! Some people seem to say you need a compact chainset and virtually 1:1 gearing, while others say it is perfectly manageable on 39:27. I'm guessing a few of you will be like me and coming back to cycling from a youth of racing, and may well have done some of these alpine climbs. How did you find them and what gearing did you use? I'd be interested to hear...
 
It isn't particularly steep, just a bit relentless if you're used to British climbs. And then it might be hot as well. I've only done it once, when I was a youthful 23 --- the day Andy Hampsten won. I used 42/23 and found that perfectly adequate... I'm sure I'd need something easier now, but I very much doubt you'd need anything approaching 1:1.

Obviously no harm in having a bail out gear --- you don't need to use it --- but if you've got a 39 front and at least mid-20s on the back, you should be OK and I wouldn't go shelling out on a compact chainset.

Just my 2c worth... I really enjoyed the Alpine climbs, and would love to do them again. Hope you get good weather for it.

nick
 
I agree don't bother buying a new chainset but when yours weres out get a compact one. I have one on mine I struggle to see how I would use 53/39 the gearing on my 34/50 with a 11-25 cassette is plenty tall enough.
 
The worst bit of the L'Alpe is the 'ramp' out of Bourg, after that it levels out and you get slight increases on the apex of each bend - depends on whether you're fit enough to grind it out for an hour or so plus the prevailing weather conditions can have a big impact.
Don't know what your base level fitness is, but a reasonably fit cyclist should be able to cope with 39x27 or 39x28.
 
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