SRAM XX DH Transmission

David Golay reviews the SRAM XX DH Transmission for Blister
SRAM XX DH Transmission

Intro

It hasn’t been a secret that SRAM has been working on a DH version of their Transmission groups, and today it’s breaking cover. Let’s check it out.

XX DH Transmission Derailleur

David Golay reviews the SRAM XX DH Transmission for Blister
SRAM XX DH Transmission Derailleur

The XX DH Transmission derailleur shares a lot of its design and features with the 12-speed Eagle Transmission derailleurs, just repackaged for a narrower range 7-speed DH cassette. It mounts to a UDH-compatible frame in lieu of the derailleur hanger, just like the 12-speed versions, and uses a similar installation procedure. Once again, there are no limit or B-tension screws to be found; the derailleur travel limits are fixed, and the B-tension is essentially set when you bolt the derailleur to the frame.

The XX DH derailleur uses the same AXS batteries that have been used across SRAM’s various wireless components for as long as those have existed, with the updated mounting position on top of the derailleur that debuted with the GX T-Type derailleur a few years ago. The XX DH derailleur’s cage is, of course, much shorter than the 12-speed Eagle versions, and the pivot points and other finer details have been tweaked to suit the smaller DH cassette, but the overall form factor is broadly similar. The XX DH derailleur also uses the same chain-damping clutch as the AXS T-Type derailleurs.

XX DH Transmission Cassette

David Golay reviews the SRAM XX DH Transmission for Blister
SRAM XX DH Transmission Cassette

The XX DH Transmission cassette is a 7-speed design with 10-24 tooth gearing. In keeping with SRAM’s other high-end cassettes, it’s machined from a single block of steel, and is designed to be used with a Flat Top T-Type chain only. Like the other Transmission cassettes, it sits slightly farther outboard than a standard cassette, using the extra space that’s freed up by the derailleur’s Direct Mount design, and thus is only compatible with the XX DH Transmission derailleur.

The XX DH cassette is offered in two different mounting configurations — SRAM’s longstanding XD driver, and a new XD Slim version. The XD Slim driver is pretty much what it sounds like — a narrower version of the XD driver that just has room for a 7-speed cassette, while the standard XD version includes a spacer to take up the extra room that’s needed to run a 12-speed cassette on an XD driver.

The idea of the HG Slim driver is to allow for wider hub flange spacing to make for a stronger rear wheel with more even spoke bracing angles. Details on the availability of XD Slim hubs are scarce, but SRAM says that it’s the same width as narrower 7-speed HG freehub bodies (e.g., as used on Hope’s Pro 5 DH hub), so it should be possible to make an XD Slim driver that retrofits to those.

David Golay reviews the SRAM XX DH Transmission for Blister
XD Mount (left) and XD Slim (right)
The two cassette versions are dedicated to their respective freehub body options and can’t be converted back and forth.

XX DH Crankset

David Golay reviews the SRAM XX DH Transmission for Blister
SRAM XX DH Transmission Crank

The XX DH Crankset looks a whole lot like the X0 Transmission crank that’s been around for a few years now. Both use forged aluminum arms with a distinctive cutout in the middle. The XX DH version is beefed up and features some extra machining on the ends of the crank arms, so they don’t show scuffs and wear as quickly.

SRAM’s existing DUB spindle diameter and eight-bolt chainring mount carry over. The XX DH crank is also offered in two spindle widths — DUB DH for 83 mm bottom bracket shells and their press fit equivalents, and DUB Wide for 73 mm spaced frames with 148 mm Boost hubs. The DUB DH versions come with a beefier chainring that produces a 56.5 mm chainline, while the DUB Wide ones come with the existing XX T-Type chainring and get a 55 mm chainline.

Both versions are offered in 150, 155, 160, and 165 mm long arms with 32, 34, or 36-tooth chainrings.

Controllers

David Golay reviews the SRAM Eagle Transmission for Blister
Eagle Transmission Pod Controllers — Pod Ultimate MMX, Pod Ultimate Discrete, Pod MMX
Nothing new here. The XX DH Transmission uses the same Pod Controller as the existing GX / X0 / XX / XX SL Transmission groups; the older pre-Transmission AXS Controllers are also compatible.

Chains

David Golay reviews the SRAM Eagle Transmission for Blister
SRAM XX Chain
The XX DH Transmission also uses the same Flat Top chains as the 12-speed Eagle Transmission variants. By default, the XX DH Transmission gets paired with the XX-tier chain, but the different tiers are all cross-compatible.

Some Questions / Things We’re Curious About

(1) SRAM says that the XX DH Transmission group shifts under power better than existing options, and that lets riders achieve higher sprint speeds due to being able to keep on the power while shifting up. How much of a difference does that really make in practice? (2) Is the XX DH Transmission group really going to appeal to anyone besides elite racers looking for every marginal gain they can find? It’s dramatically more expensive than any other DH groupset out there (the derailleur especially), so for whom is it really going to be worth it? (3) Will we see more affordable DH Transmission groups (potentially including mechanical options) down the line?

Bottom Line (For Now)

The electrification of DH bike shifting was inevitable, and it’s no great surprise that SRAM was the one to cross that particular Rubicon. We’ll have more to come on the XX DH groupset once we’re able to get some time on it, so stay tuned for that down the line.

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