time to replace the chain
#1
Thread Starter
On Your Left
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 8,373
Likes: 2,440
From: Long Island, New York, USA
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
time to replace the chain
after 3200 miles its time to replace the chain.
the bike is a trek madone 4.6 with SRAM rival. so should I just buy a SRAM rival chain or is there a better option.
please tell me which and why its better.
the bike is a trek madone 4.6 with SRAM rival. so should I just buy a SRAM rival chain or is there a better option.
please tell me which and why its better.
#2
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 28,682
Likes: 63
From: Houston, TX
Bikes: 1990 Romic Reynolds 531 custom build, Merlin Works CR Ti custom build, super light Workswell 066 custom build
KMC makes a much better. quieter chain for SRAM drivetrains. Buy the one that best corresponds to the expense level you are looking for. The SL X10 is magnificent. Ultra light and ultra quiet though a little pricey.
#3
Midwest Ullrich
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 263
Likes: 0
I ordered the KMC X10SL from a Taiwan EBay seller yesterday for $38 shipped. I did research beforehand. People seems to like it. Not a counterfit. If you concern about buying from overseas, Competitive Cyclist has it currently on sale for under $50.
#4
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 28,682
Likes: 63
From: Houston, TX
Bikes: 1990 Romic Reynolds 531 custom build, Merlin Works CR Ti custom build, super light Workswell 066 custom build
Thanks, that's good info. I guarantee you will like it. I was going crazy with drivetrain noise on my Red setups. KMC knocked the noise right out, and saved weight at the same time. Good master link too.
#6
I'm about to rotate my KMC X10SL chain off the bike - it was expensive but much quieter than my previous SRAM chains. I found a 10 speed ultegra chain on chainlove for $24 so I'm going to try that out next.
I don't think there's much point in getting super expensive and/or slightly lighter chains, personally.
I don't think there's much point in getting super expensive and/or slightly lighter chains, personally.
#7
Senior Member

Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 1,085
Likes: 222
From: Sugar Land, TX
Bikes: Specialized Roubaix SL8
I've used their X10SL and been using their X11SL chains and would recommend KMC over anything else. Even the KMC X10.93 chain that can be purchased online for less than $30 is a great upgrade. Its slightly heavier than the SL chains because it doesn't use hollow pins, but performs just as great without the added cost.
#8
Thread Starter
On Your Left
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 8,373
Likes: 2,440
From: Long Island, New York, USA
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
So I took your advice and decided to get the KMC X10SL Silver. I found a US based site that sells it for $45 including 2 Missing Link (master links) and free shipping.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
#9
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 28,682
Likes: 63
From: Houston, TX
Bikes: 1990 Romic Reynolds 531 custom build, Merlin Works CR Ti custom build, super light Workswell 066 custom build
So I took your advice and decided to get the KMC X10SL Silver. I found a US based site that sells it for $45 including 2 Missing Link (master links) and free shipping.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
#10
Experienced
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,039
Likes: 0
Whatever chain is on sale. I've used Shimano, SRAM, and KMC; none of them are any better than the others. I get whatever's cheap on Amazon; often I buy Dura-Ace for about $40 and get five at a time. I do like to get a set of KMC master links for the Shimano chains.
#11
Thread Starter
On Your Left
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 8,373
Likes: 2,440
From: Long Island, New York, USA
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
So I replaced the chain with a KMC X10SL and have to say that the bike shifts much smoother and is quieter.
I have to attribute most of that to replacing a worn chain with a new one.
I have to attribute most of that to replacing a worn chain with a new one.
#12
squatchy
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 428
Likes: 0
From: Denver
Bikes: S-works Roubaix, S-works Tarmac, Gary Fisher Promethius, Tommasini Competion, Eddy Merckx Corsa 01
So I took your advice and decided to get the KMC X10SL Silver. I found a US based site that sells it for $45 including 2 Missing Link (master links) and free shipping.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
My current chain is 107 links including the master so I assume I remove the extra links to get to 106 and add the master.
#13
Thread Starter
On Your Left
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 8,373
Likes: 2,440
From: Long Island, New York, USA
Bikes: Trek Emonda SLR, Sram eTap, Zipp 303
$45 shipped
https://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=181236536674
What's weird is the way it's listed.
New KMC X10SL Silver Chain X10 SL /Shimano/Sram/Campy 116 links
With 2 Missing Link/ Shipping From USA /Not FOB Packing
Campy is a different chain, but the one I got is Sram/Shimano. I have Sram Rival with a Shimano Ultegra Cassette and it works great.
Also they say "with 2 missing link" so I assumed it can with 2 master links. What they mean is it comes with 2 halves... so only 1 master link.
I already own a chain break so I counted 106 links and removed the extra 10 links. The master link was easy to put on and a few minutes later i went for a ride.
https://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=181236536674
What's weird is the way it's listed.
New KMC X10SL Silver Chain X10 SL /Shimano/Sram/Campy 116 links
With 2 Missing Link/ Shipping From USA /Not FOB Packing
Campy is a different chain, but the one I got is Sram/Shimano. I have Sram Rival with a Shimano Ultegra Cassette and it works great.
Also they say "with 2 missing link" so I assumed it can with 2 master links. What they mean is it comes with 2 halves... so only 1 master link.
I already own a chain break so I counted 106 links and removed the extra 10 links. The master link was easy to put on and a few minutes later i went for a ride.
#14
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 4,770
Likes: 369
From: Orange County, CA
#15
Practically speaking, you may be right, but the Shimano 7901 chain seems to come out on top all the tests I've seen. I think friction facts rates it as the lowest friction chain, and tour mag rated it as the most durable. https://www.tour-magazin.de/services/...11/page45.html
If you care about that sorta stuff, get a Dura-Ace CN-7901 (I'm sure they're cheap now that DA9000 is out). If you don't, then buy whatever is on sale.
If you care about that sorta stuff, get a Dura-Ace CN-7901 (I'm sure they're cheap now that DA9000 is out). If you don't, then buy whatever is on sale.
#16
Rubber side down

Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 1,790
Likes: 284
From: Teh Quickie Mart
Bikes: are fun! :-)
#18
Experienced
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,039
Likes: 0
#19
well hello there

Joined: May 2005
Posts: 15,491
Likes: 390
From: Point Loma, CA
Bikes: Bill Holland (Road-Ti), Fuji Roubaix Pro (back-up), Bike Friday (folder), Co-Motion (tandem) & Trek 750 (hybrid)
My last KMC wore out in just under a thousand miles.
__________________
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
#20
Still can't climb
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 23,024
Likes: 6
From: Limey in Taiwan
That has to be user error. No chain can be so bad that it can't do 1,000 miles. That's less than 20 rides for most.
__________________
coasting, few quotes are worthy of him, and of those, even fewer printable in a family forum......quote 3alarmer
No @coasting, you should stay 100% as you are right now, don't change a thing....quote Heathpack
coasting, few quotes are worthy of him, and of those, even fewer printable in a family forum......quote 3alarmer
No @coasting, you should stay 100% as you are right now, don't change a thing....quote Heathpack
#21
Administrator

Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,655
Likes: 2,706
From: Delaware shore
Bikes: Cervelo C5, Guru Photon, Waterford, Specialized CX
Several people posted here that 1,000 miles is the norm for them. Lost of things contribute - rider weight, rider leg strength, mashing, lots of hard sprinting, speeding up steep climbs standing, lots of hills.







