|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I
cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
On Jul 16, 3:20 pm, Gaz wrote:
Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. you wont go much, if any lower without getting a compact crankset. You should be able to use more or less any manufacturer rated for the right number of sprockets on the cassette (are you eight speed?). You will likely need a new bottom bracket and a crank-puller and BB tool if you don't have them already. All of this can be found pretty cheaply if you stand by for bargain spots from the hive mind hth james |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
Gaz wrote:
Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. They are easy to change. I would leave the 52 alone & change the 42 for a 39. You might be surprised how much difference the 3 teeth make. Just make sure to fully tighten them or they might come loose I bend. What cassette do you have on? Stan Cox |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
in message . com, Gaz
') wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. Fit a 'compact' chainset. The only Shimano compact I can find is over a hundred quid, which is probably not what you want to pay; other compact chainsets should work but you may need to change the bottom bracket as well. -- (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; MS Windows: A thirty-two bit extension ... to a sixteen bit ;; patch to an eight bit operating system originally coded for a ;; four bit microprocessor and sold by a two-bit company that ;; can't stand one bit of competition -- anonymous |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
On 16 Jul, 17:21, Stan Cox wrote:
Gaz wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. What cassette do you have on? Stan Cox I have a 24/13 7 speed cassette. How much can I cross the chain? If I'm on 42 ring can I safely use 5th or 6th sprocket or on 52 use 2nd or 3rd? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
Gaz wrote:
On 16 Jul, 17:21, Stan Cox wrote: Gaz wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. What cassette do you have on? Stan Cox I have a 24/13 7 speed cassette. How much can I cross the chain? If I'm on 42 ring can I safely use 5th or 6th sprocket or on 52 use 2nd or 3rd? Smaller work across the largest six without issue. Largest five if being cautious. Larger should work across the smaller six, five would be more sensible. My suggestions for your gearing issues: Front; cheapest change would be to go to 39+52, only one ring to change. 39+50 might work better for you (two rings) Then its more complicated, you could change the rear to 13-26 or 13-28, but you will loose the closeness of some of the ratios, which is a loss on a performance oriented bike (less of an issue on a chugging tourer style). Or you could change the front to either a compact (34+50) or a triple. Stronglight are a source of fairly cheap cranksets, Spa Cycles in Harrogate are one mail-order source. All of these more complicated changes might require a longer rear derailleur (a triple certainly would, plus new front derraileur, plus new shifter, forget it !), and changing the front might require a new bottom bracket, depending on what is available. - Nigel -- Nigel Cliffe, Webmaster at http://www.2mm.org.uk/ |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
in message . com, Gaz
') wrote: On 16 Jul, 17:21, Stan Cox wrote: Gaz wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. What cassette do you have on? I have a 24/13 7 speed cassette. How much can I cross the chain? If I'm on 42 ring can I safely use 5th or 6th sprocket or on 52 use 2nd or 3rd? If you can't use the whole width of the cassette without problems something's wrong. Yes, it isn't a good idea to run in the big/big or small/small combinations, because it accelerates chain wear, but it should not cause any problems if you do. If you're having a particular problem at one end of the range it's possible that your bottom bracket is the wrong length. -- (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; all in all you're just another click in the call ;; -- Minke Bouyed |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
On 16 Jul, 18:28, Simon Brooke wrote:
in message . com, Gaz ') wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. Fit a 'compact' chainset. The only Shimano compact I can find is over a hundred quid, which is probably not what you want to pay; other compact chainsets should work but you may need to change the bottom bracket as well. Is there some reason why he can't fit, say, 39/48 or a 38/46 rings to the existing chainset? If Shimano don't make them, surely someone else does? Stronglight & TA both make 130mm BCD 'rings and I thought they were sold as "Shimano compatible"... I must be missing something, here... Does this chainset have unusual compatibility requirements? Cheers, W. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Chain rings.
"Gaz" wrote in message
ups.com... On 16 Jul, 17:21, Stan Cox wrote: Gaz wrote: Hi, I have a Shimano Sora equiped Orbea with 52/42 chain ring. I cannot ride on the 52 ring unless I'm going down hill with the wind behind me :-). I like to ride in the Downs around Goodwood on my other bikes but can't on this one. Is it possible to change these for a lower sized rings. If so is it easy to do myself. What cassette do you have on? Stan Cox I have a 24/13 7 speed cassette. How much can I cross the chain? If I'm on 42 ring can I safely use 5th or 6th sprocket or on 52 use 2nd or 3rd? A 24 tooth - 42 tooth top climbing gear is suitable for a racer, but not very good for the rest of us. You can change the cassette for very little money. A slightly smaller chainring up front won't do much for you. http://www.jbarrm.com/cycal/cycal.html Try this handy online calculator. High end cassettes have several of the largest gears mounted together on aluminum carriers. The cheapest cassettes are assembled from loose steel cogs and bolted together. They can be used as found, or taken apart and assembled into custom cassettes, or you can just take off a larger cog and add it to your current cassette (giving up a smaller cog to make room). A set of 39/53 chainrings will take a 13-30 cassette (13-15-17-19-21-24-30). Your 42/52 front rings should work with up to 32 teeth in the back. To get anything easier would require a new front crankset, a compact or a triple. You might need a new chain to wrap over the largest gears front and rear. I have used cassettes this large with standard short cage Shimano road derailleurs. The 13-30 has better gear ratios, less of a jump to the last gear with a 39t front, but offers the same top climbing ratio as a 32t with a 42t up front. Dave H. ====== |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
chain rings | Vimal | UK | 3 | June 28th 06 01:39 PM |
Changing chain rings | news news | Techniques | 9 | March 1st 06 07:55 AM |
118mm BCD chain rings | David Kerber | Marketplace | 1 | February 10th 05 12:58 AM |
WTB: Shimano 9sp Chain rings | Chad G | Marketplace | 2 | February 3rd 05 02:25 PM |
FA: FSA Chain Rings 53/39t 130bcd | Bikeeron | Marketplace | 0 | January 10th 05 10:53 AM |