noob2gnarly
New Member
Really battling with my 11t ring whenever I put any torque in to it. Hard to see exactly what is happening but it’s slipping a fair bit with a new cassette, new chain, recently installed by the pros.
Yeah seems to be jumping teeth.the term slipping do you mean jumping the teeth
I don't believe it should be trying to jump off if it is setup correctly. Can you move the limit over so it's pushed out a little further? Back the b screw off until 46T gets tricky/heavy to select and then add half a turn. This seems to work for me and gives the most chain wrap
Is there any problems with the freehub driver body? The Alloy driver on my hubs is wearing a little down that end of the cassette.
chain length affects jockey wheel position also.I’ve got the derailleur as high as I can without it touching the bigger rings to create as much contact as possible...
If that chain angle is a problem, not sure how I could fix it.. spacer on the front chainring? Is that a thing?
this is pretty normal TBH. although it's usually far more commonly seen with the chain dropping from the largest sprocket to the second largest. It's just because the chains angle is at an extreme. This is how a derailleur gearing system works in the first place so it stands to reason with no guide a rearwards rotating chain will want to shift to a straighter chain line/angle.Seems odd the chain trying to move up to the 13t ring when I spin the wheel backwards. Does that happen to anyone else?
chain length affects jockey wheel position also.
running the shortest chain possible moves the mech cage forwards and upwards. This simultaniously lowers the top jockey wheel allowing you to back off B-tension even further (raising the top jockey) and creating greater chain wrap (increased chain contact) on the smaller sprockets.
The real problem is *STUPID massive range cassettes.
I've moved to 10 speed on my Ebike and now run an 11-36 off road and an 11-25 on road... Far better chain wrap... better cassette life, more useable gearing and cheaper drivetrain. A stiffer, shorter cage rear mech is a bonus too.
*I'm still fairly fit though so don't actually need a motor or super low gearing to climb.
this is pretty normal TBH. although it's usually far more commonly seen with the chain dropping from the largest sprocket to the second largest. It's just because the chains angle is at an extreme. This is how a derailleur gearing system works in the first place so it stands to reason with no guide a rearwards rotating chain will want to shift to a straighter chain line/angle.
Eh? ?
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