Help?
#1
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 12
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From: San jose, Cali
Help?


I have a sugino crankset, and its attached to a chaingaurd... The chain ring has 52t and I wanna switch to a 42T because im having troubles skidding. So can you guys give me some advice? Can I switch the Chain ring? If so, how can I do it. Because the chain ring on it right now seems un-removable. Thanks.
Last edited by freestyle2; 03-18-12 at 08:16 PM.
#6
Your current gear i ran for a while. its pretty damn high for the street. for comparison, its 85.7 GI's.
You can gear down a little more, it will make it easier to trick, but you will sacrifice skid patches. 52x20 would give you 68.6 GI's and 5 skid patches, 10 if your ambidextrous. You wont notice too much of a difference between a few GI's.
Id go 52x19.
#8
Play with this a little:
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/gears/
and browse the site a little too.
#13
No clue, I don't see any chainring bolts on that crankset. It looks like the chainring is riveted on. Just swap the cog, it will accomplish the exact same thing at a fraction of the cost and effort.
#14
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: San jose, Cali
Oh wait up... Can I still use the same chain?
Okay thanks! You're a really big help. Do you have an Aim? Maybe you can help me later on... But if you don't want to, its fine. (:
Okay thanks! You're a really big help. Do you have an Aim? Maybe you can help me later on... But if you don't want to, its fine. (:
Last edited by freestyle2; 03-18-12 at 12:41 AM.
#15
My AIM username is on my profile.
#16
Ratio is a totally usefull measure.
It is not as exact as gear inches, or gain ratio. But it is very quick to calculate, and has meaning. Reducing it down to x/1(often somewhere between 2 and 3 in most bikes) shows a basic difference between two set ups.
It is not as exact as gear inches, or gain ratio. But it is very quick to calculate, and has meaning. Reducing it down to x/1(often somewhere between 2 and 3 in most bikes) shows a basic difference between two set ups.
#17
As far an changing chain rings, look into new cranks, finding a chainring for those cranks (if you can even change the chainrings) will be a long search and most likely expensive. You have a bog standard square taper bottom bracket, go nuts.
#18
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: San jose, Cali
If youre clamping the wheel near the front pf the dropout, you'll probably need a link or a half link to go from 16t to 19t. If you're clamping near the end (away from the crankset) you should be fine.
As far an changing chain rings, look into new cranks, finding a chainring for those cranks (if you can even change the chainrings) will be a long search and most likely expensive. You have a bog standard square taper bottom bracket, go nuts.
As far an changing chain rings, look into new cranks, finding a chainring for those cranks (if you can even change the chainrings) will be a long search and most likely expensive. You have a bog standard square taper bottom bracket, go nuts.
#19
Chan length. Where you clamp he wheel in the dropout holds the chain tight. You MIGHT need to lengthen your chain to accommodate the change from a 16t cog to a 19t cog. You might not depending on how much room for adjustment you have left in your dropout.
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