Shimano's new RD-U6040 derailleur and 11-36T Hyperglide cassette make CUES lighter and more road-ready - and blur the line with the freshly revamped 11-speed Tiagra R4000.
What Shimano added to CUES
In April 2026 Shimano quietly bolted a more performance-minded rung onto its CUES ladder. The headline parts are the RD-U6040, a compact, road-optimised 2x11-speed rear derailleur, and the CS-RS400-11, an 11-36T cassette that finally brings Shimano's lighter Hyperglide shifting to the CUES family.
Shimano slots this new CUES U6040 tier between the freshly revamped Tiagra R4000 and the existing CUES U6030 - an all-road 2x11 mechanical option pitched at a more accessible price than Tiagra.
By the numbers
Source: road.cc / Shimano
Hyperglide vs Linkglide: where the weight goes
Until now, CUES leaned on Linkglide - a wider-tooth system Shimano built for durability and a claimed longer service life, ideal for commuters and e-bikes. The trade-off was weight. Switching the cassette to Hyperglide drops roughly 200g, and the slimmer RD-U6040 saves about 100g over a standard CUES derailleur.
The 11-36T cassette delivers a 327% gear range on a 47mm chainline, and it works with the existing CUES ST-U6030 Dual Control Lever on an 11-speed chain - so it doubles as a straightforward upgrade path for older 11-speed bikes.
View data table
| Grams saved vs old CUES/Linkglide | |
|---|---|
| RD-U6040 derailleur | 100 g |
| CS-RS400-11 cassette | 200 g |
How it fits with the new Tiagra R4000
CUES U6040 vs Tiagra R4000
| Tiagra R4000 | CUES U6040 | |
|---|---|---|
| Speeds | 2x11 mechanical | 2x11 mechanical |
| Cassette | CS-RS400-11 - 11-36T | CS-RS400-11 - 11-36T |
| Chainrings | 52-36T / 50-34T | 50-34T / 46-32T |
| Chainline | Narrower (pure road) | 47mm - wider (GRX-based) |
| Braking | Disc only | Disc |
| Tyre bias | Pure road | All-road / gravel (up to ~45mm) |
| Lever ergonomics | 105 R7000-derived | CUES ST-U6030 |
Specs: road.cc / Shimano
Here's the twist that answers road.cc's headline question: the CS-RS400-11 11-36T cassette is the same part Shimano launched with the new 11-speed Tiagra R4000. The two ranges now literally share a cassette.
The split is about intent. Tiagra stays pure-road - bigger 52-36/50-34 chainrings, a narrower road Q-factor and disc-only braking. CUES U6040 leans all-road and gravel: a wider 47mm chainline, smaller 50-34/46-32 chainrings and room for fatter tyres (BikeRadar reports up to ~45mm depending on frame). Shimano frames it plainly - "Tiagra R4000 remains a dedicated 'pure road' groupset," Shimano Europe's Bastian Ramler told road.cc.
What the experts make of it
Independent verdicts from across the cycling press — follow each link for the full review.
Fixes CUES's road problem
“The new RD-U6040 ... look set to enable bike brand product managers to create much better options for lower-tier performance road bikes.”
Read the full reviewStill unconvinced
“I think they could bin CUES and it wouldn't really affect anyone.”
Read the full reviewEnd of the old midrange
“The new franchise concludes Shimano's plan to overhaul its entire midrange ... replacing Claris, Sora, and Tiagra.”
Read the full reviewThe case for and against
- Cassette ~200g lighter and derailleur ~100g lighter than the old Linkglide CUES setup
- Brings faster Hyperglide shifting to affordable 2x11
- Works with existing CUES ST-U6030 shifters - an easy aftermarket upgrade
- Wide 327% (11-36T) range for all-road and climbing
- Shares the CS-RS400-11 cassette with the new Tiagra (parts simplicity)
- Loses Linkglide's headline durability, the original CUES selling point
- Adds yet another overlapping tier between Tiagra and CUES (critics call it confusing)
- Still 11-speed mechanical - no electronic, no 12-speed
- UK/EU pricing only at launch; full global and SA availability TBC
Tap to vote — see how readers lean
Common questions
Is the new CUES 11-speed compatible with my existing CUES shifters? +
Yes. Shimano says the RD-U6040 and CS-RS400-11 cassette work with the existing CUES ST-U6030 Dual Control Lever, running an 11-speed chain (CN-LG500 recommended).
What's the difference between Hyperglide and Linkglide? +
Linkglide uses wider teeth built for durability and a claimed longer service life; Hyperglide is lighter and shifts faster. The switch is what saves about 200g on the cassette.
Should I buy CUES U6040 or Tiagra R4000? +
Tiagra is pure-road - bigger chainrings, narrower Q-factor, disc-only. CUES U6040 leans all-road/gravel with a wider 47mm chainline, smaller chainrings and more tyre clearance. They share the same CS-RS400-11 11-36T cassette.
How wide a tyre can the CUES 2x11 setup take? +
BikeRadar reports clearance for tyres up to around 45mm, depending on the frame.
When is it available and how much? +
Announced April 2026. UK RRP is GBP 69.99 (~R1 500) (derailleur) and GBP 64.99 (~R1 400) (cassette); about EUR 78.95 (~R1 500) each in Europe. South African pricing varies - check the live prices above.
Sources and further reading
- Shimano expands CUES 11-speed range - but how does it fit with the new Tiagra? — road.cc
- Shimano CUES update fixes problem with the groupset for road cyclists — BikeRadar
- Shimano expands CUES and gravel-focused GRX component families — Cycling Industry News
- Shimano launches Tiagra R4000 Series groupset - 2x11-speed — road.cc
- Mechanical all-road 2x11 at an accessible level: CUES series expansion — Velomotion
- New Shimano CUES groupsets reshape its road and gravel lineup — Cycling Weekly
The RD-U6040 and 11-36T Hyperglide cassette are a smart, low-drama fix: about 300g shaved across the drivetrain, faster shifting, and a part-sharing tie-up with the new Tiagra R4000 that simplifies builds for bike brands. The catch is philosophical - by trading Linkglide durability for Hyperglide weight, CUES drifts onto Tiagra's turf, which is exactly why some reviewers still find the two ranges hard to tell apart. For a budget all-road or gravel build, though, it's a genuinely useful upgrade - and a tempting aftermarket swap for older 11-speed bikes.