Seeing as you ask. Here are the figuresI've heard you say this before, but to be honest, one of the best setups I use is an 11 speed derailleur (xt medium cage) with 10 speed (xt) shifter and cassette. Go figure.
First gen shimano 10 speed mtb shifters pull 3.6mm of cable per click and the 11 speed shifter pulls 3.4mm
So 0.2mm cable pull difference per click
Using the following shimano cassette specs we can determine the pull ratio of each mech
ie.
for a Shimano 10 speed mech to change one gear it must move the pulley 3.95mm. Knowing the shifter pulls 3.6mm per click that means the pull ratio between shifter and mech is 0.91
Meanwhile in order for a Shimano 11 speed mech to change one gear the pulley must move 3.9mm. With it's shifter pulling 3.4mm per click.
so a pull ratio of 0.87
MTB cassette spacing
Brand and model | Centre to Centre | Sprocket thickness | Spacer thickness | Total width |
Shimano 10 spd | 3.95 mm | 1.6 mm | 2.35 mm | 37.2 mm | |
Shimano 11 spd | 3.9 mm | 1.6 mm | 2.18 mm | 39.0 mm |
You can see that the pull ratios are close. but they're not the same. a pull ratio difference of 0.04 or in laymans terms a difference of 1.5mm over the width of the entire cassette
The internet is full of folk telling stories of using mismatched components and experiencing great performance from them.
The truth is mismatched components rarely ever offer as good performance as the actual correctly matched components.
I wasn't talking about the recently released 2021 shimano Deore (10, 11 and 12) drivetrain components here but previous gen 10 and 11 speed shimano mtb drivetrain components. Neither were you.
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