Campy's 8 speed stuff used the same spacing as 7 speed, it was only
Shimano's that was different.  I used 8 speed Ergo with 7 speed Sachs
freewheels.  It worked fine with no tinkering needed.  I believe that
any 7 speed should work, FW or cassette.  All you should have to do is
adjust the limit stops on the derailleur to keep from throwing the
chain to the inside.

Bill

On Dec 16, 8:53 am, fenderbender <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sorry, but with all you experts assembled could I just ask what to do
> with these early aero wheels given to me?
> They are virtualy new and have tubular rims with 7sp (?) freewheel
> hubs. I'd like to fit them to a 90's italian roadbike that have 8sp
> Campa Ergopower shifters.
> Could I find or build a freewheel that would work with those shifters?
> Any thoughts on what good value tubulars to choose for centuries/long
> distance events?
> Thanks, and a wheely Merry Christmas to you all!
>
> On 5 Dec, 17:31, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
>
> > Quoting PATRICK MOORE <[email protected]>:
>
> > > On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 11:33 AM, tallsteelbikes <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > >> On Dec 3, 4:36 pm, "PATRICK MOORE" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > >> > But 8 sp was indeed slightly closer spaced than 7 -- which is why,
> > >> > presumably, they went with 130 instead of 126 OL spacing.
>
> > >> They went with 130 because the hub required more spacing and more
> > >> dish.  The 8 speed hub is bigger to accomodate the extra cog.  The 9
> > >> speed spacing got tighter but still used the same hub as an 8 speed.
>
> > > That is what I was fuzzily thinking but not articulating.
>
> > > I've not tried this, but perhaps you can drop off a cog from a 10 sp
> > > cassette and install the remaining 9 on a 7 (if you follow me). The only
> > > hindrance would be some sort of theoretical difference in the spoke end of
> > > the freehub body that prevents the spider from fitting over the spoke end
> > > flange (which is how they cram 10 into the space of 8 without reducing
> > > spacing any further than it was for 9...)
>
> > Obviously you wouldn't want to set up a new bike that employed such  
> > tricks, and if you had a steel or titanium frame that was spaced to  
> > 126 you could get it spread to 130.  So we're talking about an old  
> > aluminum or carbon fiber frame.
> > Given that, why not just run them with 7 speeds, as they were  
> > originally built?- Dölj citerad text -
>
> > - Visa citerad text -
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