Hub gears or internal-gear hubs are a type of gear system used on bicycles. Hub gears are used mostly on utility bikes and various types of small wheeled bicycle, such as folding bikes. Hub gears work by internal planetary or epicyclic gearing, which means that the outer case of the hub gear unit (which is attached to the spokes) is made to turn at a different speed relative to the rear wheel's sprocket depending on which gear is selected.
In the United States and United Kingdom, hub gears are less common than derailleur gears which are the dominant gear system on most modern bicycles in these countries. In most of continental Europe, however, hub gear systems are dominant. Hub gear systems have in the past also been used on motorcycles, although this is now quite rare.
Unlike derailleur gears, where the gears and mechanism are exposed to the elements, hub gears are enclosed within the hub of the bicycle's rear wheel. Gears are changed by a cable which is tightened or loosened by a lever or twist grip on the handlebars.
Hub gears were invented in 1903 by an English company Sturmey Archer, and by the 1930s they had become common on bikes across the world. Their popularity has been much diminished by derailleur gears which, since the 1950s, have become the most common type of gear system on bicycles, due to their lower price and wider gear range, although hub gears have undergone a small revival in recent years.
Though most hub gear systems use one rear sprocket, SRAM's DualDrive system combines an epicyclic hub with a multi-speed rear derailleur system to provide a wide-ranging drivetrain concentrated at the rear wheel. The system is useful for folding bicycles (where a multiple front chainset could run afoul of the bike's folding mechanism) and in recumbent bicycles and freight bicycles (where small wheels and/or increased weight require a wider range of gears with smaller individual steps between each ratio).
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