I am having a problem with my chain sagging in the small chainring to small cog combination. I am aware that it is inadvisable to use this or the big chainring to big cog. I have a triple chainset with 46-36-24 and my cassette is an 11-32. I have put a new chain on and checked the length required using a calculator and also manually over big chainring, big cog according to advice on Park tools website. I have a long cage Shimano Deore XT rear derailleur which can handle up to 33 teeth. I've also calculated that my chainring/cassette combination is within the Total Capacity. I've adjusted the rear derailleur to Park Tools recommendations and it is changing the gears smoothly, but I still have this problem in the small to the small combination. My only thought is that there is something wrong with the derailleur. Can anyone out there advise me as to what to do, apart from buying a new bike?
Hello @Velocibob!
A couple of our BikeRide community members shared their opinion via Facebook:
Yannick: "Don't buy a new bike for a drivetrain issue, figure out the problem. The chain should not sag in this gear combination but you shouldn't use that combo if you want your components to last. If it wasn't sagging before the new chain, use your old chain length and use that length on your new one. If it was sagging before, then it is most likely a rear derailleur issue. See if the derailleur tensions the chain back by bringing the arm forward and releasing it. It should quickly snap back and tighten the chain. If not, that's your issue."
Mark: "It doesn’t sound like there is anything there’s wrong with your bike, it sounds like you are using the gears incorrectly. If you have a triple then a simple guide is that the largest front chainring should be used with the smallest half of your back cog range. I.e from about half way down to the bottom of the block, the middle chain ring for the middle part of your cog range I.e. not at either top or bottom but ok nearly everywhere else and the smallest ring for only the top half (bigger cogs) of your cogs. Its It’s ok to skirt the edges in a pinch , broken front mech, bad time to change etc. but you are better to get comfortable with changing your front mech and being in the right gear. If I drove my car in 1st at 60mph I’m sure it would skip a bit too, I wouldn’t take it to my mechanic though .... I’d just be using it wrong."
Hi there Jesper, I've gone out and bought a new rear derailleur. I'm pretty sure that this is the cause of my problem. I probably hit the derailleur, whilst lifting my bike over an awkward stile. I've spent a lot of time off-road during this strange time. Once I've got it fitted and fine tuned I'll be able to tell you if I'm right or not. Another contributor pointed out that the Chainring difference was 22 teeth, not 24. Either due to poor math or concentration on my part. The chainset is a TA one and they do advise not having more than 12 teeth difference between chainrings. So it looks like the chainset falls within what is tolerable.