Broken chain on the trail.

nandewar

Member
Aug 13, 2020
25
6
Australia
I am putting together a tool kit for a tour.
I recently broke my derailleur hours from anywhere and had trouble getting it out of the way so I could push the bike (1 1/2 hours later) to a road.
I didn't have a chain breaker or link pliers. It got me thinking.
If I break a chain on the trail, am I right in thinking that I will need pliers, a joining link AND a chain breaker to remove a full link?
Any ideas on nice light weight tools to pack would be appreciated too.
Cheers.
 

RustyIron

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
Jun 5, 2021
1,846
2,887
La Habra, California
You can probably get by without a pliers, but you can't get by without a chain breaker and a quick link.

For tools, I like the OneUP EDC tool that fits inside your steerer tube. It has a chain breaker and holds a quick link. On an epic ride, I might carry another quick link, a four-link length of chain, and a tiny pliers that's made specifically for opening quick links.
 

militantmandy

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2022
399
369
Tweed Valley, Scotland
You can open a quick link with a shoelace, but I would probably carry a mini quick link tool if I was doing an epic. Shoelace is last resort! There are lots of small quick link tools, mostly combined with tyre levers, or as above, in an EDC.
 

Planemo

E*POWAH Elite
Mar 12, 2021
605
706
Essex UK
I just keep an old bit of coiled up brake cable in my toolkit to break quick links. Very similar to the shoe lace idea but usually more effective because theres no give in a break cable. Takes up virtually zero space too.
 

Bndit

Active member
Jul 14, 2022
305
359
Finland
I'm with Rustylron, Oneup EDC tool on steerer tube, I bought it because of chainbraker. No need for pliers to add quick link to broken chain.
 

andyb2

Active member
Jan 10, 2020
176
251
somerset
I take this:
I also carry this mini tool, which can remove a link:

I've used both on the trail, and they'll do the job but you'd would want to use a proper tool when at home.
 

theremotejuggernaut

Active member
Aug 2, 2022
385
276
UK
I have these Tyre levers that double as chainlink pliers. Always used to get by with a small folding plier type multi tool but had to remove the chain one cold and rainy day and could not get the quick link apart with cold hands so went for a proper solution.

The only time I've ever tried to use a chain breaker on a multitool, it broke the tool before the chain so I carry a full sized chain tool.

To be fair, I carry a lot of things. Spare bolts? Yep.
Spare valve? Yep.
Spare gear cable? Yep.
 

Cell4soul

E*POWAH Master
Jul 11, 2022
518
1,325
Mesa, AZ
i think it was already mentioned, but I also use the One Up EDC tool kit with pliers installed in my EDC pump. This is an awesome set up with little weight penalty over a separate pump/multi tool combo.
 

Mikerb

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
May 16, 2019
6,570
5,064
Weymouth
Im one who always carrys a chain complete in my ruck sack the right length with a quick link
Job done.
I agree with that. If you break a chain on a ride it may not be repairable and it is so much easier to just replace it with a chain already cut to size. I carry the chain that I previously replaced but for an epic it may be better to carry a brand new one cut to size.
 

Stihldog

Handheld Power Tool
Subscriber
Jun 10, 2020
3,589
5,076
Coquitlam, BC
i think it was already mentioned, but I also use the One Up EDC tool kit with pliers installed in my EDC pump. This is an awesome set up with little weight penalty over a separate pump/multi tool combo.
I carry the same pump/tool combo, but my tire valves don’t work properly so I’ve got some cleaning/tire change/maintenance to do before the snow comes …soon!
 

RickBullotta

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Jun 5, 2019
1,849
1,579
USA
You don't need to remove any existing quick links. Just remove the broken link(s), add a new quick link, move the quick link to the top side of the chain, grab rear brake, light tap on the pedal to lock the quick link in place, and you're good. The only tool you need is a chain breaker and a quick link. I always carry 3 quick links because sh*t happens.
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
9,021
9,463
Lincolnshire, UK
You don't need to remove any existing quick links. Just remove the broken link(s), add a new quick link, move the quick link to the top side of the chain, grab rear brake, light tap on the pedal to lock the quick link in place, and you're good. The only tool you need is a chain breaker and a quick link. I always carry 3 quick links because sh*t happens.
I carry a spare quick link or two. Also some old quick links to give away to those riders who otherwise be stranded by the lack of any quick link at all.
 

theremotejuggernaut

Active member
Aug 2, 2022
385
276
UK
You don't need to remove any existing quick links. Just remove the broken link(s), add a new quick link, move the quick link to the top side of the chain, grab rear brake, light tap on the pedal to lock the quick link in place, and you're good. The only tool you need is a chain breaker and a quick link. I always carry 3 quick links because sh*t happens.
I had a clear out and rearranged the tool pouch I carry in my pack. I had a 9 and 2x 10 speed quick links in there!

That's an unnecessary 7 grams that I've been carrying for ~10 years lol
 

squeegee

Well-known member
Aug 19, 2019
373
281
USA
I've been using this tool for a few months, it's unusual to find link pliers, chain breaker and link holder all in one, is a high quality tool. 120mm and light, chain breaker is strong and detachable handle allows good torque on chain breaker.

 

jbrown15

Well-known member
May 27, 2020
800
659
Chilliwack, Canada
It's already been said but hard to beat the OneUp EDC tool, it has a chain breaker and on top of that you can have the quick link pliers and it holds a spare link. All in your steer tube, it's brilliant.
 

RustyIron

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
Jun 5, 2021
1,846
2,887
La Habra, California
Being a grumpy old cheapskate with a gargantuan ego, I'm not about to pay for a junky chain link tool made in some third-world shack. The Lezyne is super cool, but I'm REALLY not willing to pay for that.

I normally don't carry such flamboyant luxuries, but epic rides require a more robust contingency plan. I had an old channellocks that weren't very useful, so I bobbed the handles and ground the jaws so they would fit inside a chain link. They fit in my tube pouch as if they're not even there. The weight is about that of two Gu Chews.

IMG_8346.jpeg IMG_8347.jpeg
 

RickBullotta

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Jun 5, 2019
1,849
1,579
USA
I had a clear out and rearranged the tool pouch I carry in my pack. I had a 9 and 2x 10 speed quick links in there!

That's an unnecessary 7 grams that I've been carrying for ~10 years lol

Think of all those Strava PR's you're missing because of all that extra weight you're carrying...
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,274
5,065
Scotland
I am putting together a tool kit for a tour.
I recently broke my derailleur hours from anywhere and had trouble getting it out of the way so I could push the bike (1 1/2 hours later) to a road.
I didn't have a chain breaker or link pliers. It got me thinking.
If I break a chain on the trail, am I right in thinking that I will need pliers, a joining link AND a chain breaker to remove a full link?
Any ideas on nice light weight tools to pack would be appreciated too.
Cheers.
I struggle to split joining link so carry pliers. Never had this problem before I had 11 speed . Then again if the chain breaks it could be anywhere so you would get away without pliers.
 

RickBullotta

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Jun 5, 2019
1,849
1,579
USA
I struggle to split joining link so carry pliers. Never had this problem before I had 11 speed . Then again if the chain breaks it could be anywhere so you would get away without pliers.

My question is why would you need to remove quick link out on the trail?
 

Ebike mad

New Member
Oct 8, 2022
5
4
Australia
I am putting together a tool kit for a tour.
I recently broke my derailleur hours from anywhere and had trouble getting it out of the way so I could push the bike (1 1/2 hours later) to a road.
I didn't have a chain breaker or link pliers. It got me thinking.
If I break a chain on the trail, am I right in thinking that I will need pliers, a joining link AND a chain breaker to remove a full link?
Any ideas on nice light weight tools to pack would be appreciated too.
Cheers.
I am putting together a tool kit for a tour.
I recently broke my derailleur hours from anywhere and had trouble getting it out of the way so I could push the bike (1 1/2 hours later) to a road.
I didn't have a chain breaker or link pliers. It got me thinking.
If I break a chain on the trail, am I right in thinking that I will need pliers, a joining link AND a chain breaker to remove a full link?
Any ideas on nice light weight tools to pack would be appreciated too.
Cheers.
Best tool is crank brothers

B78BC185-2806-41F1-8CA1-A463B936053E.jpeg
 

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