Sachs Elan
The Sachs Elan was an epicyclic internal hub gear for bicycles, developed and manufactured by the bicycle division of the German company Fichtel & Sachs. It was considered heavy and production units were plagued with quality issues. The gear hub was discontinued before the turn of the 2000 millennium.
History
[edit]The Elan was introduced in 1995 and manufactured until 1998. With its 12 speeds and an overall range of 339%[1] it was the most advanced epicyclic hub gear at the time, and the first hub gear commercially available with more than 7 speeds.
After SRAM Corporation took over ownership of the German bicycle component manufacturer, the Elan was sold under the name Spectro E12.[1][2]
The Elan received a blow with the introduction of the Speedhub 500/14 by the then small family-owned company Rohloff AG of Hessen, Germany, a technically more advanced product, and was discontinued before the turn of the 2000 millennium.
Specifications
[edit]Weight was a full 3.4 kg (7 1/2 pounds) and 4 kg with an integrated coaster brake.[2]
Speed | Ratio | Percentage diff. |
---|---|---|
1 | 1,433 | |
2 | 1,174 | 22,1% |
3 | 1 | 17,4% |
4 | 0,848 | 17,9% |
5 | 0,75 | 13,1% |
6 | 0,675 | 11,1% |
7 | 0,62 | 8,9% |
8 | 0,566 | 9,5% |
9 | 0,522 | 8,4% |
10 | 0,485 | 7,6% |
11 | 0,451 | 7,5% |
12 | 0,423 | 6,6% |
Versions
[edit]- MH 12110 with coaster brake
- MH 12010 without coaster brake
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b DEALER TECHNICAL MANUAL Archived 2011-01-11 at the Wayback Machine, SRAM, 1999
- ^ a b "The Sachs Elan 12-speed hub". www.sheldonbrown.com.