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  1. Ditchdigger710 on

    That’s the wrong free hub body for your current campagnolo cassette. So it’s not gonna work. If you had shimano group set you would just need a free hub spacer for the free hub since it’s an 11 speed free hub with 10 speed cassette. Sorry for the bad news bro

  2. Campagnolo cassettes require a Campagnolo freehub body. And 10 speed Campagnolo is not compatible with 10 speed Shimano/sram. Based on the picture, the wheels won’t work for you, unless the hub manufacturer can actually supply a 9/10/11/12 speed Campag freehub.

  3. ViolinistSmooth2759 on

    There’s a company called j-tek that makes a part called the shiftmate, it’s a cable pull adaptor that allows campy to shift shimano and vice versa, for this set up you want the shiftmate-1. About fifty bucks.

  4. Actually, I think you may be able to make this work if you’re willing to go to a Shimano 8-speed cassette. If I recall correctly Shimano 8-speed and Campagnolo 10-speed are pretty compatible. Of course you’ll only have 8 gears rather than 10, but your shifters and derailleurs should shift fine on it. I’m not sure about the existing chain.

  5. psyentologists on

    You can buy “conversion” cassette from Ambrosio and Miche (or at least you used to), which are spaced for Campagnolo shifting but which fit Shimano freehub. I have one, it works just fine, but they are hard to get outside of Europe. I tried to find one to link here, but my Google fu sucks or they’re just really hard to track down these days.

    Then there’s [Shimergo](https://www.cyclinguk.org/cyclists-library/components/transmission-gears/derailleur-gears/shimergo), which involves changing your derailleur.

    But by far the best option is to contact the manufacturer about a Campagnolo freehub body.

  6. If the wheel manufacturer does not sell a Campagnolo compatible freewheel body, then I would look elsewhere. There are so many wheel manufacturers that do, including the Chinese brands.

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