Road Cycling - Giant TCR1 shifting problem

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If you put the chain in the small ring up front and the smallest cog in the back the chain rubs against the large chain ring. Is this normal for this frame becasue the chain stays are so short? Is the frame defective? Can this problem be solved by puting in a longer spindle?
timmhaan
06-18-04, 02:10 PM
it's probably okay. is this a triple chainring? you always want to pick a gearing combo that makes the chain as straight as possible. riding with a gearing combo as you described above will put unnessary stress on the chain and components.
Moistfly
06-18-04, 02:13 PM
it's probably okay. is this a triple chainring? you always want to pick a gearing combo that makes the chain as straight as possible. riding with a gearing combo as you described above will put unnessary stress on the chain and components.
:werd:
You need to come up to your middle ring up front and gear appropriately from there.
If you put the chain in the small ring up front and the smallest cog in the back the chain rubs against the large chain ring. Is this normal for this frame becasue the chain stays are so short? Is the frame defective? Can this problem be solved by puting in a longer spindle?
It's called Cross chaining it's not a good idea. Read this article http://www.active.com/story.cfm?story_id=8701 for more details
timmhaan
06-18-04, 02:22 PM
:werd:
what does :werd: mean?
Moistfly
06-18-04, 02:29 PM
what does :werd: mean?
It's one of those things you just have to know about or else it's stupid and pointless. And I have no idea whatsoever how to explain it.
pletcgm
06-18-04, 02:33 PM
You never want to ride big to big or small to small. That crosses the chain and will cause that rubbing sound. So yes, that is normal. This happens worse with triple chain rings. The best habit to get in is to shift from 39 to 53 when the rear cogs are in the third, fourth, or fifth cog.Since I have gotten into that habit, I have not had that problem anymore.
When you have big to big or small to small, you put strain on the chain and have a higher probability of it breaking on you.
It's called Cross chaining it's not a good idea. Read this article http://www.active.com/story.cfm?story_id=8701 for more details
I understand that cross gearing is not a good idea, and I don't ride that way. I found this problem when the bike was up on the rack. My concern is that the chain rubbing on the large ring indicates that there is something wrong with with the alighnment of the frame or the crank set.
B/T/W it a double crank.
timmhaan
06-18-04, 02:35 PM
:werd: to yo mama Biatch
oh, so it's like 'word'? just spelled differently and with colons at the beginning and end?
I understand that cross gearing is not a good idea, and I don't ride that way. I found this problem when the bike was up on the rack. My concern is that the chain rubbing on the large ring indicates that there is something wrong with with the alighnment of the frame or the crank set.
B/T/W it a double crank.
I wouldn't worry about it as that's not a positiion the chain should ever be in. It's just the angles that's all exacerbated by the narrower width of the double.
oh, so it's like 'word'? just spelled differently and with colons at the beginning and end?
That's the best take I've got on it
Moistfly
06-19-04, 03:35 PM
The colons are the way to tag smileys on vb boards. sortof like how :o creates an embarrased face, you can do things like :frown: to create a frowny face.
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