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Can a $30 MRP Cage Guard Save Your $650 SRAM T-type MTB Transmission Derailleur?

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SRAM’s latest family of Eagle Transmission derailleurs hyped their durability, but nothing is indestructible, and MRP thinks their new Cage Guard is the perfect insurance policy. Sure, it’s just a little $30 piece of engineered plastic. But MRP knows a thing or two about keeping mountain bike drivetrains safe. And based on the dents & gouges in my own Transmission derailleur after just a half a year of riding, I feel like mine could use a bit of extra protection…

MRP Cage Guard protects SRAM Transmission derailleurs

MRP Cage Guard protects full-mount SRAM Transmission t-type derailleurs
(Photos/MRP)

MRP has been in the business of creating bash-guards and low-friction sliders to protect our sensitive drivetrain, literally since the birth of technical mountain bike riding took hold in the 1990s. So seeing them decide to make a bash guard for some of the most expensive mountain bike derailleurs ever mass-produced seems pretty logical to me.

Machined in-house in Grand Junction, Colorado from durable & slippery Delrin thermoplastic, MRP created the 8g Cage Guard “to protect your SRAM T-Type derailleur pulley cage from costly damage caused by rocks and debris“.

MRP says the new Cage Guard does double-duty of first preventing impact damage, and secondly of keeping your alloy cage from snagging when it hits a sharp or especially abrasive rock.

Bounce off, and glide over rocks. Because ultimately, limiting cage damage ensures the best shifting performance out of your premium SRAM Transmission.

Do you really need a bash guard on your SRAM MTB Transmission Derailleur?

MRP Cage Guard protects full-mount SRAM Transmission t-type derailleurs, my GX cage after 6-months of riding
(Photo/Cory Benson)

Look, making a derailleur that works with a 10-52T spread is always going to mean a long cage hanging down within reach of trailside rocks. I know a big part of SRAM’s latest direct-mount Eagle T-Type Transmission derailleurs was easier serviceability. And the spin-off cage trick really makes replacing a cage faster & easier, that is if you have a spare lying around. But these big angular cages do seem to stick out more than even the previous generation of Eagle derailleurs, making them more vulnerable low-hanging-fruit for hungry rocks.

Sure, the new T-type design means you can easily replace the quick-release alloy GX cage for around $100, a shiner alloy XX cage for about $150, or the fancy carbon XX SL cage for $200. But that means the cheapest replacement Transmission cage will still cost you more than 3x the price of the MRP Cage Guard. So, maybe with $30 of Cage Guard prevention, it’ll never come to that.

Yes, it is maybe debatable whether 8g of plastic is really going to prevent a well-placed rock strike from killing your derailleur cage. But it certainly won’t hurt, right?

I can say that I’ve hit a lot of rocks, bashing my trail & enduro bikes through rock gardens. And I also fondly remember more than two decades of bashing crankarms and chainrings onto rocks with MRP guards protecting me.

MRP Cage Guard – Pricing, compatibility & availability

MRP Cage Guard protects full-mount SRAM Transmission t-type derailleurs, angled Delrin plastc detail

This new little Delrin plastic MRP Cage Guard sells for $29.95, directly from Mountain Racing Products. And yes, that’s a pretty expensive piece of plastic, but it’s a lot cheaper than any replacement T-type derailleur cage. The Cage Guard is designed to bolt onto the latest generation of direct (full) mount SRAM Transmission derailleurs. Just remove the T25 lower pulley bolt, slap the Cage Guard on, then tighten it in place with the included longer stainless steel M4 bolt.

MRP Cage Guard protects full-mount SRAM Transmission t-type derailleurs on SS Eagle

It’s compatible with everything from the OEM-only S100, GX, X0, XX & the top XX SL T-type derailleurs. So you get bash guard protections whether you have a steel, aluminum, or carbon outer cage.

MRPbike.com

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13 Comments
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Atakua
Atakua
1 day ago

Waiting for knockoff Aliexpress variants costing 5$ or less.
Oh, wait, I do not have a Transmission.

edzoba
edzoba
1 day ago
Reply to  Atakua

ali only copies what makes sense:)

James Thurber
James Thurber
9 hours ago
Reply to  Atakua

And I have a Rohloff. Go figure!

John
John
1 day ago

Can the bike industry save itself for exorbitantly prices drivetrains?

Greg
Greg
1 day ago

Deleted

Last edited 1 day ago by Greg
Mike
Mike
1 day ago

So instead of having ugly scratch marks on RD cage now we can pay to have an ugly plastic piece there? Brilliant!

Tom Wenzel
Tom Wenzel
1 day ago

Proof that nocebo effect is real: when a solution precedes the problem.

Veganpotter
Veganpotter
22 hours ago
Reply to  Tom Wenzel

You think they designed this before anyone broke their cage?

WTXWC
WTXWC
4 hours ago
Reply to  Tom Wenzel

How do you think Problem Solvers designed their entire company?

Smith
Smith
19 hours ago

Can someone lend me 30 bucks.
I’m not gonna pay you back, because the only way I’m gonna buy this is if it free…

Jose
Jose
17 hours ago

Is this really gonna keep the cage from getting bent? I have bent many Transmission cages already and the GX cages are made of soft steel so those go rather quickly. The XX cages are forged aluminum and pretty strong, yet as I’ve hit them, the lower part that’s around the lower pulley has bent and even pulled the pulley bolt out. I see this as only keeping the cage from getting scratched. Maybe someone can explain what I seem to be missing or it’s just for scratches which seems rather useless.

Lucas
Lucas
14 hours ago

Don’t buy 650$ mech for and MTB ! It’s a joke!

Last edited 14 hours ago by Lucas
Tom
Tom
8 hours ago

as ridiculous as it sounds, maybe a titanium cage that can elastically deform during a hit is a better solution

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