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Stronglight chainrings multiple bcd?
Consider this 86BCD Stronglight chainring.
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...df06835a35.png I know the extra pair of holes aren't quite ready to accept chainring bolts, but are they at correct distances to be adapted for use with larger BCDs? If so, what might those two other BCDs be? |
I just recently discovered these - https://www.sheldonbrown.com/cribsheet-bcd.html
You just print the sheet at 100% scale & then drop a Chainring or crank on to get the BCD https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...e69e99f39a.png |
I used one of those to make my triplizer for SL 93 cranks. The middle set of holes is at 122 mm, so all you have to do is counterbore them for the flange of the nut to nestle down flush, to avoid snagging the chain.
Oh and on the crank, you have to remove the shelves on each of the 5 spider arms where the inner went when it was a double. I just hacksaw them off then file smooth. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...0411850da3.jpg |
Some of those extra holes were used to mount chsinring guards that were available from Stronglight.
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Originally Posted by bulgie
(Post 23692024)
I used one of those to make my triplizer for SL 93 cranks. The middle set of holes is at 122 mm, so all you have to do is counterbore them for the flange of the nut to nestle down flush, to avoid snagging the chain.
Oh and on the crank, you have to remove the shelves on each of the 5 spider arms where the inner went when it was a double. I just hacksaw them off then file smooth. |
Originally Posted by SoCaled
(Post 23691972)
I just recently discovered these - https://www.sheldonbrown.com/cribsheet-bcd.html
You just print the sheet at 100% scale & then drop a Chainring or crank on to get the BCD |
Originally Posted by jonwvara
(Post 23692101)
Some manufactured triplizers require the same thing, but that has always struck me as an unnecessarily brutal modification. I have delicate sensibilities, it looks like.
However there are places where crank parts have surprising little maerial (circled): https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...3427b17a9d.jpg |
Originally Posted by smontanaro
(Post 23691964)
Consider this 86BCD Stronglight chainring.
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...df06835a35.png I know the extra pair of holes aren't quite ready to accept chainring bolts, but are they at correct distances to be adapted for use with larger BCDs? If so, what might those two other BCDs be? |
Originally Posted by oneclick
(Post 23692106)
The shelves can be seen as structural, in that absent them all you have is the chainring bolts; fine if they fit and are tight...
However there are places where crank parts have surprising little maerial (circled): https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...3427b17a9d.jpg |
Originally Posted by jonwvara
(Post 23692101)
Some manufactured triplizers require the same thing, but that has always struck me as an unnecessarily brutal modification. I have delicate sensibilities, it looks like.
This tandem left-side crank (for timing chain on a crossover) started life as a right-side road crank. I installed a steel thread insert to make it left hand thread for the pedal, and removed the shelf, which would have hit the chainstay. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...a9e62a3430.jpg Fun Fact, a lot of the sponginess you feel when you stomp on the front (captain's) pedals on a tandem is from the bottom tube being bowed by the chain tension. The only leverage the chain has to bow the tube is the offset out of the center plane of the bike (chainline measurement), so reducing that to the minimum is pure "bolt-on stiffness" with no weight penalty (or any other penalty). So all tandems should have the timing ring just skim the chainstay like this, and should have their inner shelf brutally sawed off. Oh and use the largest chainrings that'll fit, because chain tension (and flex) goes up as the ring gets smaller. I'm a big fan of "some" flex, but a lot of tandems have too much of that spongy feeling at the cap'n pedals. |
Originally Posted by JohnDThompson
(Post 23692182)
I don't see that the shelf provides any support for the type of load that the chainrings exert on the bolts. It serves to facilitate alignment.
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Originally Posted by JohnDThompson
(Post 23692180)
I just checked my chainrings. The middle set of holes does correspond with the 122mm BCD used by Stronglight 93 and 104 cranks (but you'd want to counterbore them for the chainring bolts. The outer set of holes does not correspond with either 130mm or 144mm BCDs. I do not have a 135mm BCD ring to compare. It does correspond with the Stronglight chain guard.
--Shannon |
Originally Posted by ShannonM
(Post 23692366)
128, maybe?
128mm in a Nervar BCD. 135mm is a Campagnolo/Miche BCD |
Inner hole-to-hole measures ~ 50; Sheldon sayeth 50.5 = BCD 86, Stronglight 80, 99, etc.
Middle ~71, Sheldon 70.7 = 122, also Stronglight as above Outer ~ 93, so BCD = 158 (smallest ring almost certainly >44). |
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