T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
54.1 | Automation strikes again. | FURILO::BLESSLEY | | Thu May 01 1986 14:49 | 5 |
| I have a DECalc spreadsheet for 10speed (maybe 15, I forget) gearing.
Nothing fancy, but beats a pencil and paper.
-Scott
|
54.2 | SUGGESTED GEARING | AKOV05::FULLER | | Thu May 01 1986 15:54 | 10 |
| Setting up a triple crank on a relatively short wheelbase
could cause some problems. One bike that I set up a wide
range on uses a 39/48 shimano crank and 12/14/16/18/21/26/32
on the rear. This 14 speed setup has worked really well for
me with many midranged gears. Some say the ultra 7 freewheel
adds to the wear, but I have found only excessive wear on
a couple of gears. If you persue this, make sure you have
6 speed spacing in the rear wheel and frame.
steve fuller
|
54.3 | digicalc does it better than decalc :-) | MENTOR::REG | | Thu May 01 1986 17:29 | 6 |
| I too have a spread sheet calculator for half step, in digicalc.
Can send you an image, or run if for you if you give me the starting
points.
Reg
|
54.4 | | PBSVAX::HALBERT | | Thu May 01 1986 18:54 | 11 |
| re .0:
Your idea of a triple sounds eminently reasonable, especially for the
terrain. I have an (almost) half-step triple Trek, 28/45/50, 13-28,
originally bought for California. The triple really saves my knees, and
lets me keep spinning. The bike came with Cyclone II derailleurs, but I
traded them for a Mountech front and a Superbe Tech rear. I find the
Mountech front shifts very nicely. The Superbe Tech has no trouble
winding up the excess chain.
--Dan
|
54.5 | { | THUNDR::SOUZA | | Thu May 01 1986 19:20 | 14 |
|
re .2
I don't understand what you mean when you say that a triple crank on a small
wheelbase may cause problems; I understand that I would have to install
a new, bottom bracket with a longer axle -- is that what you mean?
Also, I've got standard 5-speed spacing between my dropouts, so Ultra-6
is as high as I can go. I see some wear, but it's not a problem.
My basic premise is that to get smaller chainwheels, I've got to buy a new
crankset, and if I'm going to do that it might as well be a triple...
|
54.6 | a racer's view | APOLLO::DEHAHN | feel the spin | Fri May 02 1986 12:44 | 25 |
|
If a 42-34 isn't small enough a gear for you, then you have little
choice but to go with a triple. It will shift a lot better, too.
I hate to see anyone retire a Campy crank for a lesser triple, but
them's the breaks.
There are many ways to set up a triple to get the "sweet spot" in
the range you want. Your setup is awfully close to a half-step.
As long as your idea of the middle range lies within the range of
the the half-step, it's ok. But when you go out of this range, there's
going to be a gap between the granny and the middle ring.
Think about this, a standard alpine setup (42-53,14-26 or 28) and
a 28 tooth granny. That will give you the mid range you want, and
the upper granny gears (28-18,28-20) are useable.
14-16-18-20-23-26 or 14-16-18-20-24-28.
Food for thought.
CdH
|
54.7 | re: 54.5 | AKOV05::FULLER | | Mon May 05 1986 09:42 | 11 |
| What I was refering to was the length of the chainstay. If it is
less than 16 3/4", you could find the triple more bothersome to
use than its worth because of chain aligment.
If you want to save your campy crank, Avocet makes a 41 tooth
chainring. You could then have your chainstay's spread by a
framebuilder for a 6 speed axle to put an ultra 7 on.
just something else to think about.
|
54.8 | Avocet 41 not really Campy compatible | WEBSTR::FISHER | | Mon May 05 1986 12:24 | 20 |
| Avocet does make a 41 tooth chain ring that has the same bolt circle
as the Campy's but they also took a notch out of the end of each of
the spider arms to accomodate the chain. Thus an Avocet 41 on an
unmodified Campy crank arm should hop, skip, or jump about 400 - 500
times a minute.
(I do not recommend modifying a Campy crank to look like an avocet.)
As for a "racer's view" of gearing, (like calling 42-53 x 14-28
"alpine gearing") with all due respect, I think a racer's view of the
mileage required to achieve the conditioning needed to use these
gears is somewhat more than 100 miles per week. (invitation to flames)
In other words, I heartily recommend a triple (50-45-28) to anyone who
is not into "no pain, no gain, grunt it out" mileage. Avocet is an expensive
way to acheive this but the chainwheels are hard enough to withstand
tens of thousands of ham handed shifts. Sugino has a number of cheaper
offerings, the chainrings are softer. A good touch on the front deraileur
and the chainwheels should last a long time, I have seen many cases of
severely chewed front rings on Sugino AT's, however.
|
54.9 | re 54.7 | THUNDR::SOUZA | | Mon May 05 1986 18:03 | 7 |
| -< re 54.7>-
Okay, now I understand. But between which two points does one meaure
the chainstay?
I suppose this is obvious to everybody else...
|
54.10 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | feel the spin | Tue May 06 1986 09:15 | 24 |
|
Put the rear wheel as far forward as you can realistically go in
the rear drops. The chainstay length is the distance between the
BB spindle center and the rear axle center.
Re: -2 <no flame>
I had no intention of promoting pain when suggesting that gearing.
This is how I reasoned it. Most of you use a large gear of 50-13,
right? I suggested 53-14 (or 52-14) because it's close and will
allow your freewheel spacing to be closer together when using a
14 tooth top cog. I suggested a 42 tooth inner ring because it extends
his now-lacking middle range DOWNWARD (ie. easier gears) in comparison
to the standard 45 tooth. And then you can put on your 24, 26 or
28 tooth granny for the stump pulling.
I simply was trying to suggest an alternative gear layout other
than the half-step. The choice of the actual gears is up to the
individual.
CdH
|
54.11 | Spin highest gear you can, (@ 100 + rpm) | MENTOR::REG | a remote control for my foot ? | Wed May 14 1986 17:42 | 14 |
|
re "a racer's view" I don't believe in pain either, but I
sometimes believe that grannie gears are self fulfilling, i.e.
the racers don't have them because they got strong enough to not
need them by not having them... and conversely, a good way to stay
weak... etc.
Reg
53/43 12-17
(Well, I have to commute on it, hence the 43)
|
54.12 | Good for mountains, but I try to ignore it | APOLLO::WORRELL | | Mon May 19 1986 12:15 | 21 |
| If this is too late, maybe it'll help someone else.
I've been doing some casual riding with a triple for almost two years.
The setup is 52/40/28 and 14/15/16/18/21/26. I didn't know much about
triples when I got a new bike and asked for those gears, but it's
worked out well. If I ignore the granny, it's like a 12-speed, but I
have a reserve. At the end of last summer, I didn't need it even
climbing Mt Wachusset. My first ascent of Wachusset this year, I sure
did need it, but only there. It will sure be welcome when touring with
30-60 lbs of ____.
The 26 cog is also like a reserve, real nice having close spaced high
gears when I'm fresh, but real low gears when my strength is reduced to
that of a couch potato.
Since I added the triple myself, I didn't think about the fact that the
derailleur (sp?) can't take up the slack on the 28 with the 14-18 cogs.
I really don't need those, but I plan to upgrade my derailleur
sometime just for the convenience.
Glen
|
54.13 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | feel the spin | Tue May 20 1986 08:37 | 12 |
|
Re: -1
That's exactly the type of setup I was referring to in a previous
reply.
Glad it worked out for you, Glen.
CdH
|
54.14 | | IOSG::HORSFIELD | jakc - the well-known typo | Fri Aug 01 1986 11:08 | 5 |
| i don't do much cycling these days.
jack
52/36 and 14-24
|
54.15 | Need clarification | AFVAX::PARR | Oh Prints, here Prints. . . | Tue Oct 24 1989 12:53 | 11 |
| I'm new to the technical side of biking (i.e. gearing, etc.) and have
seen mentioned in numerous places warnings about not using the lowest
gear ratio, (biggest freewheel, smallest chainring). Something about
it messing up your chain, gears, etc.
Could someone please post an explaination of this for me, or point to
a note if it's discussed elsewhere??
Thanks,
Brian
|
54.16 | Dura Ace 16 spd is really only 14 :^) | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Tue Oct 24 1989 13:51 | 20 |
| re: -1
You might be referring to the damage you can do to your
knees (and other parts of your anatomy) by not *spinning*
at a high cadence since you are in a very high gear for
the situation,e.g., climbing a hill with the chain on the
*large* chainring instead of the small(er) one. Or, you
are referring to the mechanical problems of chain, ring and
cog wear (strain) from crossing the chain in the transmission
from pedal to rear wheel. The rule for a standard 10, 12 or
14 speed bike (2 chainrings and either 5, 6 or 7 cog freewheel)
is to never cross the chain from the big wheel to the big cog
or from the small wheel to the small cog as this puts to much
strain on the chain and cogs leading to rapid wear or breakage.
If you suscribe to this theory your 12 speed just became a 10
speed and so on.
_Jerry
_Jerry
|
54.17 | | TALLIS::JBELL | Personna Au Gratin | Tue Oct 24 1989 14:07 | 19 |
| > I'm new to the technical side of biking (i.e. gearing, etc.) and have
> seen mentioned in numerous places warnings about not using the lowest
> gear ratio, (biggest freewheel, smallest chainring).
I think you mean big-to-big or small-to-small.
There are two reasons to avoid it:
1. It wears the parts faster. The chain has to curve from the plane
of the chainwheel to the plane of the cog. The further the
seperation, the more the wear (and drag).
2. There is probably another combination that will give you about
the same ratio but cause less wear. Depending on your
gearing setup, big-to-big might be the same ratio as small
chainwheel to middle sized cog.
-Jeff Bell
|
54.18 | The advice doesn't hurt hill ups and downs | FSTTOO::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Thu Oct 26 1989 13:17 | 11 |
| Jeff's statement is probably referring to what you have heard.
It is generally true that you should not use small/small or big/big
combinations, which crosses the chain it its sharpest angle.
This restriction does NOT involve limiting you from using your
lowest or highest gear ratios (often referred to in gear-inches).
That is big/small or small/big where the chain is relatively
straight.
~Mike
|