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

New: Take Part in the new April's Giveaway for a Chance to Win the Euybike S4 Pro Max ebike worth $1299


Low Gear Jumping on Old Road Bike
#1
I have an old Sovereign Free Spirit 12 Speed with friction shifters. It is a great bike overall except for one hugely annoying quirk that is has had since I got it, for free I might add. Since day one it has had this habit of wanting to jump out of first gear. It will do it no matter what I am riding on, flat, up hill or downhill. It does ti considerably fast when going up hill. The steeper the grade the faster it will jump. It generally jumps into 4th gear. I have had the cables replaced, new cable housings, and completely adjusted the derailleurs. I am at a loss as to where this is coming from and what to do about it. I really want to figure this out myself without paying a repair shop to do it, with questionable results. A couple of points of interest. I am certain the front derailleur is not the stock derailleur. It looks like someone took a standard derailleur off of and 18 or 21 speed (a three sprocket derailleur), removed the bottom sprocket and adjusted the gears and chain to run on the upper two sprockets. I don't know if this might be influencing this problem. Also, just today I discovered a tremendous amount of slack in the cable. when I try and shift into higher gears (i.e. if I try to go from 1st to 4th or anything like that). This might be making the problem worse but I doubt it is causing it. I doubt this because the same day the cables were replaced and tightened along with derailleur adjustments, this problem was still present.

A not on how the shifters work. They are lever shifters, on the center of the bike right up against the handlebars. To chance gears (From 6-1) you push the lever from straight up and down to laying flat against the frame. I can post a picture later if this actually proves to be relevant to the problem.
  Reply
#2
my first guess is that there is a chain problem; one of the following:
* one or more chain links are too stiff.
* chain is too long.

next guess is that there is not enough slack in the cable housing between the shift levers mounted on the handle bar stem and where they are clamped or terminated on the frame so that any movement of the handle bars causes an up shift.
Nigel
  Reply


Possibly Related Threads...

Forum Jump:

[-]
10 Latest Posts
What is the best Mountain Bike you've ev...
Yesterday 08:22 PM
Hello, from Friendly Manitoba
Yesterday 07:14 PM
braking by reversing the pedals
Yesterday 02:08 PM
Giant reporting profits are 60% down
Yesterday 09:50 AM
Pogačar's 2024 dominance
04-05-2025 04:20 PM
Thoughts on tariff effects on the cyclin...
04-05-2025 10:30 AM
What was your first bicycle?
04-04-2025 11:07 PM
Post-Ride Nutrition
04-03-2025 02:06 AM
🚴‍♂️ Saddle Up for the Belgian Waffle Ri...
04-03-2025 02:03 AM
Pre Ride Food Intake
04-03-2025 12:14 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. GirishH
22 posts
no avatar 2. Flowrider
18 posts
no avatar 3. Jake1
14 posts
no avatar 4. meamoantonio
12 posts
no avatar 5. SPINMAN
9 posts