As the old saying goes there is more than one way to skin a cat.
Wolf Tooth Components is a small company ouf of Minnesota that has made its name with aftermarket XX1 style chainrings and conversion cogs. They design and manufacture in-state and support a surprising number of World Cup XC racers who run a 1x Shimano drivetrain with drop stop chainrings and their GC conversion cogs.
The GC cog is basically a way to get the range of the vaunted SRAM 11 speed cassette with an existing 10 speed drivetrain. It’s an adapted solution, so without adding an extra click you have to remove one of the smaller individual cassette cogs to make it all run. I opted for the 40t rather than the 42t because it offered smaller gaps between gears and required less B screw tension. All of that should mean slightly crisper shifts. To make room for the 40t on my Shimano XT test cassette I had to remove the 15 or the 17, and honestly neither option was appealing as the jump between cogs was huge. It shifted fine with either removed, but the difference in gear inches under power was hard to handle.
After fiddling around with a few different configurations I ordered Wolf Tooth’s 16t cog which essentially means removing the 15 and 17 so that the 16 sits in the middle. The difference in spacing is pretty consistent through the range and following instructions for Shimano or SRAM means you can align the shift gates so they work properly.
While the 16t cog works well with either manufacturer the GC cog is specific to SRAM or Shimano and is not compatible with every cassette available (Neither Shimano SLX nor the SRAM 1080 will work) but options from the XT/X9 wheelhouse are both available. Following these directions Wolf Tooth promises smooth, consistent shifting and after riding this setup for most of the summer I have to say that I fully agree. If you didn’t know that this setup was installed you would never know from shifting quality or gear spacing that it was anything other than a normal cassette- and I have to say that’s a really good thing.
This ringing endorsement does not however cover all conversion setups. I also tried a rival company’s conversion and had a miserable experience pushing my bike up usually rideable inclines because the chain would not stay in the lowest gear without jumping every pedal stroke. Although it shifted consistently in the work stand it did not handle the torque loads of slow, technical climbs out on the trail- and that’s really the only thing it is designed to do. No adjustment to the rear derailleur could be made to accomodate the new cog, nor did changing the chain have any impact, but the reinstalled Wolf Tooth worked flawlessly without any further adjustment.
Whether this is worth it for you depends on your application. It works well for fatbikes, trail bikes, and even XC race rigs as long as you can handle your preferred terrain with a 30 or 32t chainring. The additional chain required to handle the huge 40t means that you can only run this with a single front chainring and not 2x or 3x setups. Most riders are looking to go to this to remove the additional chainrings so it should be a non-issue, but it’s worth mentioning.
This is a great way to get the same wide range as an 11 speed drivetrain with parts you already have. It’s not cheap, but it is far more cost effective than an entirely new drivetrain, and as long as you get the additional 16t cog to go with it the whole setup is hard to beat. With a clutchless rear derailleur, a ~32t narrow/wide chainring like Wolf Tooth’s Drop Stop or the Narrow Wide from RaceFace and the GC cog you’re most of the way there at a fraction of the cost. That’s assuming you can readily run a 32 chainring on your current crankset and already own a compatible rear derailleur.
For more information visit wolftoothcycling.com.
How did you run the set up 1x or 2x? Thinking of running this on a fatboy with an xt cassette and rear der.
Right now I’m using a Race Face 32t narrow wide chainring with a KMC chain and a SRAM X0 type 2 derailleur. The chain length would be prohibitive for a 2x- too much slack in the low/low combination for the derailleur to carry. For a good low combo I’d probably stick with a 24/36 up front with an 11/36 out back.
Good to know. On the fatty I will most likely stay the course. Will be trying a 30T xx1 front matched to. 40 T xtr rear on the main whip if/when the cassette/shifter/chain appear’(11 speed). Thanks!