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SRAM Eagle GX, XO1 vs. Transmission GX vs. Linkglide 11 speed XT

vman

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I’m currently running mixed SRAM Eagle GX and X01 drivetrains across four of my eMTBs. My standard setup is an X01 or XX1 chain, a GX or X01 rear derailleur, a single-click shifter, and either a GX or NX cassette.

I’ve noticed a recurring issue across all four bikes: they eventually develop a "sticky tooth" in the 3rd or 4th rear cog. Once this happens—usually between 300 and 1,000 miles—the drivetrain ticks in that gear unless the chain is kept meticulously clean and lubed. Interestingly, my X01 and XX1 chains are actually outlasting the cassettes.

Because of this, I’m considering swapping to either a Shimano XT Linkglide (11-speed) or a SRAM GX Transmission. How do these two systems compare in terms of chain and cassette durability for eMTB use?"
 
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I’m currently running mixed SRAM Eagle GX and X01 drivetrains across four of my eMTBs. My standard setup is an X01 or XX1 chain, a GX or X01 rear derailleur, a single-click shifter, and either a GX or NX cassette. I’ve noticed a recurring issue across all four bikes: they eventually develop a "stick...
First, that "sticky tooth" on the 3rd/4th cog between 300 - 1,000 miles across all four bikes is worth pausing on before you bin the whole system. That's a very specific, repeatable failure - which usually points at something mechanical rather than just wear. Worth checking the cassette spacer situation and B-gap, because consistent ticking in two adjacent cogs can be the cassette not seated flush or chain gap being marginal, not the cassette being shot. If your X01/XX1 chains are outlasting the cassettes, the cassette is taking the abuse - classic Eagle on an ebike.

On the actual question - durability of XT Linkglide (11sp) vs GX Transmission: Linkglide is Shimano's deliberately over-built drivetrain, designed specifically for the wear you're describing. Shimano's own claim is roughly 3x the cassette lifespan of Hyperglide. The trade-off: 11-speed, slightly less crisp/wide range, and it's heavier. But for "I keep eating cassettes," it's the most targeted fix going. @Mikects's post sums up the feel well - "much tougher with a very satisfying clunk," better than Hyperglide on an ebike even if not as slick as GX Transmission.

GX Transmission is the modern, robust answer - hangerless, direct-mount, shifts under full power (genuinely useful on a torquey ebike), and the derailleur is far more abuse-tolerant. The honest caveat: T-Type cassettes can still wear fast under hard ebike use - there's a forum thread titled "SRAM T-type cassette worn out after 940 miles," and @irie's post argues a Shimano cassette would be very unlikely to wear that fast.

So the split: • Want maximum cassette life and don't mind 11sp / mechanical? → XT Linkglide. It's the purpose-built durability pick.

Want best-in-class shifting under power and a bombproof derailleur, accept the cassette may not last forever? → GX Transmission.

Given your symptom is specifically chewing through cassettes, Linkglide is the more direct cure. But fix the seating/B-gap first - be a shame to throw money at a problem a spacer might solve.
 
First, that "sticky tooth" on the 3rd/4th cog between 300 - 1,000 miles across all four bikes is worth pausing on before you bin the whole system. That's a very specific, repeatable failure - which usually points at something mechanical rather than just wear. Worth checking the cassette spacer situation and B-gap, because consistent ticking in two adjacent cogs can be the cassette not seated flush or chain gap being marginal, not the cassette being shot. If your X01/XX1 chains are outlasting the cassettes, the cassette is taking the abuse - classic Eagle on an ebike.

On the actual question - durability of XT Linkglide (11sp) vs GX Transmission: Linkglide is Shimano's deliberately over-built drivetrain, designed specifically for the wear you're describing. Shimano's own claim is roughly 3x the cassette lifespan of Hyperglide. The trade-off: 11-speed, slightly less crisp/wide range, and it's heavier. But for "I keep eating cassettes," it's the most targeted fix going. @Mikects's post sums up the feel well - "much tougher with a very satisfying clunk," better than Hyperglide on an ebike even if not as slick as GX Transmission.

GX Transmission is the modern, robust answer - hangerless, direct-mount, shifts under full power (genuinely useful on a torquey ebike), and the derailleur is far more abuse-tolerant. The honest caveat: T-Type cassettes can still wear fast under hard ebike use - there's a forum thread titled "SRAM T-type cassette worn out after 940 miles," and @irie's post argues a Shimano cassette would be very unlikely to wear that fast.

So the split: • Want maximum cassette life and don't mind 11sp / mechanical? → XT Linkglide. It's the purpose-built durability pick.

Want best-in-class shifting under power and a bombproof derailleur, accept the cassette may not last forever? → GX Transmission.

Given your symptom is specifically chewing through cassettes, Linkglide is the more direct cure. But fix the seating/B-gap first - be a shame to throw money at a problem a spacer might solve.
B gap has been set perfectly on all bikes - its not that.
 
B gap has been set perfectly on all bikes - its not that.
Fair enough - B-gap ruled out, noted. So if it's repeatable across four bikes with correctly set B-gap, that narrows it down considerably. A few things still worth ruling out before committing to a full drivetrain swap:

Cassette spacer - there's a known gotcha with SRAM cassettes on some freehub bodies where a missing or wrong spacer causes the cassette to sit fractionally out of position. @Stevewheels's post covers exactly this symptom. Worth a quick pull of the cassette to confirm it's seated flush with the correct spacer stack.

Freehub wear - the 3rd/4th cog is where you spend the most time, so the freehub splines can develop notching there specifically. A worn freehub lets the cassette micro-shift under load even when everything else is right.

Chain wear pattern - if you're rotating chains or running the same chain long enough to develop a wear signature on those two cogs, the "sticky tooth" can be the chain linking with worn pins rather than the cog itself.

That said - if you've genuinely ruled out seating and setup, and it's four bikes with the same symptom, the honest read is that Eagle cassettes (particularly GX/NX) do wear faster under sustained eMTB torque loads, and that's a real and well-documented pattern.

On your actual question - which replacement holds up better: Linkglide's durability case is well-established in the eMTB world. Shimano designed it with exactly this use case in mind - sustained torque, heavy riders, high-cadence climbing. From what I understand the cog profiling and chain interface are purpose-built for durability rather than featherweight shifting performance. The trade-off is 11-speed and a slightly more agricultural shift feel.

GX Transmission shifts better and the derailleur is genuinely more robust, but T-Type cassette longevity under hard eMTB use is mixed - @RolyNZ's post on chain rotation discipline is worth a read regardless of which system you go to.

At 98kg across four hard-ridden bikes, I'd lean Linkglide as the durability-first pick - but it's worth confirming the spacer situation first, because that's a five-minute fix that would be annoying to have missed.
 
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