GL1
Member
So just a comment that if (or when) you bend a tooth on your cassette, don't throw it out or spend money on a replacement just yet!
I have heard of people replacing them immediately if they bend a tooth which we all know is common on eBikes. I do my best to shift "softly" but it happens and especially when shifting under load (like a quick climb) or when it gets caught under load during the transfer of the chain from one cog to another. At any rate, on most cassettes you can easily remove the cassette, place it flat and pound the bent tooth back with a hammer and a punch (or if it's a single cog, a vice) of any sort. If it's a cog in the attached cluster (as the one below was), you can also use a combination of pounding and slight bending against the other cogs with a flat screwdriver to get it straight. I have done it three times and no issues.
Below is the worst I just had happen. It was skipping in that gear like crazy and I could not ride it in that cog. I was beginning to think it was new cassette time after that one...HOWEVER...it literally took less than a minute of precise pounding and a little screwdriver bending and it's back to shifting like butter.
No "after" shot but here is the "before." Pretty bad on a mid-level SRAM cassette (whatever came on my 2020 Levo Comp.)
So don't replace them until you have at least tried to pound / bend them back!
I have heard of people replacing them immediately if they bend a tooth which we all know is common on eBikes. I do my best to shift "softly" but it happens and especially when shifting under load (like a quick climb) or when it gets caught under load during the transfer of the chain from one cog to another. At any rate, on most cassettes you can easily remove the cassette, place it flat and pound the bent tooth back with a hammer and a punch (or if it's a single cog, a vice) of any sort. If it's a cog in the attached cluster (as the one below was), you can also use a combination of pounding and slight bending against the other cogs with a flat screwdriver to get it straight. I have done it three times and no issues.
Below is the worst I just had happen. It was skipping in that gear like crazy and I could not ride it in that cog. I was beginning to think it was new cassette time after that one...HOWEVER...it literally took less than a minute of precise pounding and a little screwdriver bending and it's back to shifting like butter.
No "after" shot but here is the "before." Pretty bad on a mid-level SRAM cassette (whatever came on my 2020 Levo Comp.)
So don't replace them until you have at least tried to pound / bend them back!