Campagnolo ErgoPower

Campagnolo ErgoPower is an integrated gearshift and brake lever system designed by Campagnolo for racing bicycles.[1] It allows shifting gears without having to remove a hand from the bars, unlike previous down tube shifting systems. It was launched in 1992 to compete with Shimano Total Integration (STI). It is characterized by having three separate levers per unit: one each for braking, upshifts, and downshifts.[2] Ergopower levers may be disassembled for servicing.[3]

The Centaur Ergopower Shifter

Details

ErgoPower levers contain the mechanism inside the main body of the unit, rather than in the top of the brake levers as STI does, and there is no sideways action on the brake lever. Instead, the "flipper" that changes to a smaller cog on STI levers changes to a larger cog, and there is a small lever (sometimes called a 'mouse ear') on the inside of the brake hood body that shifts to a smaller cog.

gollark: I'd expect so.
gollark: t!daily
gollark: What, really? Weird. What is this *based* on?
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gollark: curse the accursed rate limit

See also

References

  1. "Ergopower 1992 (in italiano)". Tears for Gears. December 1, 2009. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
  2. "Campagnolo Veloce Ergopower Shifters review". Bike Radar. 1 Mar 2006. Archived from the original on 5 August 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
  3. "An exploded view of pre-2009 Centaur QS/Escaped 10-speed Ergopower lever". VeloNews. Jun 2, 2009. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
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