Have questions or want to discuss cycling? Join Now or Sign In to participate in the BikeRide community.

Best Black Friday E-Bike Deals 2024 | Up to $1,700 in Savings

New: Take Part in the November Giveaway: Starts November 18th


Chain slips / skips / grabs / runs rough ???
#1
As you can see, I don’t know quite what to call it.

Here’s the deal: I cleaned my chain a couple of weeks ago with one of those Finish Line kits (the plastic body with brushes that you fill with solvent and run your chain through), and ever since then I’ve had a slip / skip / grab, but only on the fifth sprocket in the rear freewheel.

This is only when I’m peddling the bike, not when I’ve got the back wheel up on my mini-rack. I guess I can’t turn the pedals fast enough by hand to duplicate the force.

It doesn’t matter what ring I’m on in front (there are three) and the other six gears in back run great--really smooth and quiet. It’s only the fifth sprocket that I can hear and feel, almost as if the chain was rubbing on something.

I’ve readjusted my derailleur, including fiddling with the limit screws, but to no effect. (I had thought maybe it was rubbing the gear above, and that by adjusting the limits, I could adjust where it sat on the sprockets.)

The chain itself is in good shape. I checked it with the ruler method that I learned from Alex’s tutorial. And, while the bike is ten years old, I barely rode it the first eight years I owned it. The jockey wheels line up straight under each sprocket, so I don’t think it’s a problem there.

I’m assuming it’s a problem with the sprocket itself, so I looked at all the teeth very carefully, and, yes, some of them do look like shark’s fins (fins, not teeth), but none terribly so, and, besides, some of the teeth on all the sprockets look like shark’s fins -- and, anyway, I thought some of the teeth were supposed to be shaped like that? Is that right?

So, is there anything else it could be that I’m not checking? Is this something fixable, short of replacing the freewheel, or do I just need to learn to live with it.

One odd thing -- as a side note -- when I was adjusting the limit screws, tightening the L screw would move the chain towards the spokes. Luckily I have a plastic spoke guard, but it was definitely the case that if the screw was too tight, the chain wanted to hit the spokes.

Thanks for any help/advice.
  Reply
#2
Quote:I’m assuming it’s a problem with the sprocket itself, so I looked at all the teeth very carefully, and, yes, some of them do look like shark’s fins (fins, not teeth), but none terribly so, and, besides, some of the teeth on all the sprockets look like shark’s fins -- and, anyway, I thought some of the teeth were supposed to be shaped like that? Is that right?

I recently fitted a new chain and had a similar problem. When the chain wears it stretches and once it stretches sufficiently it starts to wear the chainrings and cassette sprockets faster than normal. If the chain is used when worn for long enough the chainrings and sprockets wear to accommodate the stretched chain to such an extent that a new chain no longer meshes properly with the worn teeth.

The smaller rear sprockets on the cassette with fewest teeth wear fastest, especially if one of the sprockets is used as your favoured gear. My bike too was fine with little pressure on the pedals, but would skip as soon as I applied any force while riding.

If the problem sprocket is one of the two smallest that are separate from the main cassette body and you can find them sold separately, you could try replacing just the problem one. If not, then you'll probably have to get a whole new cassette. However, before you do that, just double check that there are no stiff links in the chain.

One last thing that occurs to me, it's not the chain rubbing on the front mech is it? When you pedal hard, the chainset and bottom bracket will flex a little and this can cause the chain to rub on the front mech whilst it won't when the bike is in a stand and you turn the pedals by hand.
  Reply
#3
(06-13-2010, 11:43 PM)xerxes Wrote:  
Quote:I’m assuming it’s a problem with the sprocket itself, so I looked at all the teeth very carefully, and, yes, some of them do look like shark’s fins (fins, not teeth), but none terribly so, and, besides, some of the teeth on all the sprockets look like shark’s fins -- and, anyway, I thought some of the teeth were supposed to be shaped like that? Is that right?

I recently fitted a new chain and had a similar problem. When the chain wears it stretches and once it stretches sufficiently it starts to wear the chainrings and cassette sprockets faster than normal. If the chain is used when worn for long enough the chainrings and sprockets wear to accommodate the stretched chain to such an extent that a new chain no longer meshes properly with the worn teeth.

The smaller rear sprockets on the cassette with fewest teeth wear fastest, especially if one of the sprockets is used as your favoured gear. My bike too was fine with little pressure on the pedals, but would skip as soon as I applied any force while riding.

If the problem sprocket is one of the two smallest that are separate from the main cassette body and you can find them sold separately, you could try replacing just the problem one. If not, then you'll probably have to get a whole new cassette. However, before you do that, just double check that there are no stiff links in the chain.

One last thing that occurs to me, it's not the chain rubbing on the front mech is it? When you pedal hard, the chainset and bottom bracket will flex a little and this can cause the chain to rub on the front mech whilst it won't when the bike is in a stand and you turn the pedals by hand.



Thanks!

It's definitely in the back sprocket (or least not in the front -- I've got some chain drag that I have to trim from time to time, so I know what that sounds like).

I guess it has to be what you say, it's just so weird to me that I can't see any real problems, and that it didn't start until after I cleaned the chain. (Or maybe cleaning made the other gears run so smoothly that I finally noticed the difference???) I just wanted to see if there was something I was overlooking.

I'll probably just get used to it, or learn to live without the fifth gear. I'm not up to doing any major repairs just yet.
  Reply


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread
Author
Replies
Views
Last Post
 
3,296
04-27-2020, 03:24 PM
Last Post: Joe_W
 
8,213
04-19-2016, 07:59 PM
Last Post: RBurrelli
 
16,992
06-02-2014, 04:41 PM
Last Post: BingoBilly
 
23,628
10-31-2012, 11:43 AM
Last Post: lupystar
 
14,527
10-27-2012, 10:35 AM
Last Post: DaveM
 
12,621
10-21-2012, 04:23 AM
Last Post: 1FJEF
 
28,291
08-01-2011, 02:19 AM
Last Post: AndrewB

Forum Jump:

[-]
10 Latest Posts
Tasmania! Anyone ridden here?
Today 06:17 PM
Cycling is Anti-Aging, But There's a Cat...
Today 06:15 PM
What was your first bicycle?
Today 08:06 AM
need e-trike advice (wife knee surgery)
Yesterday 07:59 PM
Moving in Style: Beyond Regular Transpor...
11-22-2024 07:43 AM
Second wheelset for ebike.
11-22-2024 01:41 AM
Tire Sizing (Or How to Buy A Tire)
11-21-2024 12:36 PM
The Roaming Radrunner Vlog 1 Why ride ...
11-21-2024 09:17 AM
Recording Bike Rides
11-20-2024 01:37 AM
Ketone Ester $$$
11-19-2024 01:04 AM

[-]
Join BikeRide on Strava
Feel free to join if you are on Strava: www.strava.com/clubs/bikeridecom

[-]
Top 5 Posters This Month
no avatar 1. Jesper
20 posts
no avatar 2. GirishH
14 posts
no avatar 3. Flowrider
11 posts
no avatar 4. ReapThaWhirlwind
11 posts
no avatar 5. Talha
10 posts