Silly Chain Adjustment Question

Discussion in 'Technical Help' started by StuarT595, Apr 3, 2021.

  1. StuarT595

    StuarT595 Active Member

    Nov 19, 2020
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    When for example it says 4cm of free play, which of the below examples of measuring is correct?
    In image 1 the chain’s movement is through a 4cm ‘window,’ and in image 2 the chain’s upper edge is free to move upwards by 4cm.
    I hope you get what I mean?

    6FD83A43-63D6-4B11-B8E6-0598E97FBDA7.jpeg

    04A4B6CD-061D-488C-B15D-BA7B5657325D.jpeg
     
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  2. Yorkshireman

    Yorkshireman Crème de la Crème

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    The bottom image, but reversed, if you get my meaning. You should measure mid way along the bottom run of the chain at its tightest point, ideally with you sat on the bike so the suspension is loaded as it would be when riding.
     
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  3. StuarT595

    StuarT595 Active Member

    Nov 19, 2020
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    Brilliant! Many thanks for that...much appreciated YM as always.
     
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  4. Ducatitotriumph

    Ducatitotriumph Crème de la Crème

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    No such thing as a silly question!
    Not on here anyway!
     
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  5. joe mc donald

    Subscriber

    Dec 26, 2014
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    Yes no stupid questions here in the asylum. And answered quickly thanks to Yorkshireman.
    Joe.
     
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  6. Brixton Steve

    Brixton Steve Member

    Sep 21, 2019
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    #6 Brixton Steve, Jun 5, 2021
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2021
    If you are talking about the T120 I'm afraid Yorkshireman is wrong ,just checked my handbook which says to check the chain with no weight on the bike (section 1 page 100).Assume that means without anyone sitting on it.
    If I've made a total prat of myself and it's different model, then, many apologies to Yorkshireman.
     
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  7. Pegscraper

    Pegscraper Elite Member

    Jun 12, 2020
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    Chain slack specs are usually with the bike upright but unloaded, ie, no one sat on it. The spec allows for the chain tightening during riding and will (should) give a min and max chain slack figure. Don't know the measurements for your bike but an example would be between 20 and 30mm so 15mm will be too tight and 35mm too slack.
     
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  8. Kinjane

    Kinjane Active Member

    Oct 15, 2017
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    What I do on each new bike and it only needs doing once..
    Support the bike upright and remove the shocks. Tie up the swinging arm or put spacers below it until the three axis are in perfect alignment. Tighten the chain adjusters slowly whilst rotating the wheel to find the tightest spot.
    Once found back off the adjusters until you get 5mm or running slack measured at the midpoint. Refit the shocks and leave bike on side or centre stand without rotating the wheel and measure the slack. I prefer to pull down as hard as I can and push up as hard as I can to gat an easily repeatable minimum measurement. Write this figure down!
    This may take a couple of hours to get your minimum figure but you’ll never run an overtightened chain again.
     
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  9. Yorkshireman

    Yorkshireman Crème de la Crème

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    Apology accepted ;)
     
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  10. Red Thunder

    Red Thunder Crème de la Crème

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    I would have thought image 1 would be correct, being 4cm total travel from being pushed up to being pushed down
    This is how I have been doing it for 25 years since I was shown at what was my local bike shop

    I have not had any issues with the chain being too tight doing it this way, as always enough slack for when the rear suspension is under load and the chain would be at its tightest.

    Have I been adjusting it too tight for 25+ years!

    If it is too slack I find gear changing gets clunky and the chain snaps tight when put under load

    (2010 Speed Triple btw)
     
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  11. Cyborgbot

    Cyborgbot Guest

    They’re talking about your secret S&M dungeon.
     
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  12. Rtasker

    Rtasker Member

    Feb 18, 2018
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    Neither image is quite right. Image 1 is closest, but is indicating the distance between highest position of the top of the link and lowest position of the bottom of the link. What should be measured is the range of movement of a single feature - either the top edge of the link or the bottom edge.
     
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  13. Tricky-Dicky

    Tricky-Dicky Crème de la Crème

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    I always use total deflection, not just one way.
     
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  14. Rtasker

    Rtasker Member

    Feb 18, 2018
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    Yes, that's what I mean by 'range of movement'.
     
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  15. Pegscraper

    Pegscraper Elite Member

    Jun 12, 2020
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    I use a small piece of stiff white card, one for each bike, with the correct min-max marks so no need for a ruler. Checking takes seconds. No point in marking the chain for it's tightest spot either as it will change as the chain wears.
     
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  16. andyc1

    andyc1 Lunarville 7, Airlock 3

    Feb 4, 2017
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    KTM has a simple solution...
    SmartSelect_20210609-085208_Samsung Notes.jpg
     
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  17. Yorkshireman

    Yorkshireman Crème de la Crème

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    So does BMW;)
    upload_2021-6-9_10-12-46.jpeg
     
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  18. Notso

    Notso Senior Member

    Dec 17, 2018
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    They focussed too much on the drive, that little wheel will have rubbish grip...:p
     
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  19. Kinjane

    Kinjane Active Member

    Oct 15, 2017
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    I hope their Shaft drives are better aligned than their sprockets

    sprocket worn.jpg
     
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  20. OsteKuste

    OsteKuste Intergalactic Warlord
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    It makes a brilliant pizza cutter though
     
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