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another great conversation from the Bike Friday Yak!
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Check the alignment of the derailleur hanger. The symptom you describe can be explained by the axis of the derailleur-pivot not being parallel to axis of the wheel.
As for poor shifting, I read on a review for another bike using a cheap cassette that it had inconsistently spaced cogs, resulting in poor shifting, and "hunting" between gears at the far ends of the cassette.
-- John Thurston Juneau, Alaska
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another great conversation from the Bike Friday Yak!
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Hey Yakers,
I'm looking for ways to gain more clearance between my rear derailleur and the ground.
I have a new NWT - 18 speed / two ring. It came with the microSHIFT M46S MarvoLT Short Cage rear derailleur, an 11-34 cassette, 53/39 chain rings, and 1.35 (35mm) wide tires. When in the Lowest gear (39/34) the bottom of the derailleur cage is less than an inch from the ground, and less than 1/2 an inch from the side of the tire. In this condition, there is no way I would want to ride on anything rougher than light gravel.
For reference, the NWT this bike is replacing, has a Shimano Deore rear derailleur, 52/42/30 triple, and an 11-28 cassette. The bottom of the cage on that bike has plenty of clearance to the ground, and is above the tire, so has clearance there to.
On Wed, Jul 5, 2023 at 2:40 PM Rick Mason <rick.a...@gmail.com> wrote:I'm looking for ways to gain more clearance between my rear derailleur and the ground.
I have a new NWT - 18 speed / two ring. It came with the microSHIFT M46S MarvoLT Short Cage rear derailleur, an 11-34 cassette, 53/39 chain rings, and 1.35 (35mm) wide tires. When in the Lowest gear (39/34) the bottom of the derailleur cage is less than an inch from the ground, and less than 1/2 an inch from the side of the tire. In this condition, there is no way I would want to ride on anything rougher than light gravel.
Clearance in the frame is one thing. But one also needs to watch clearance between the tyre and the chain.
With a smooth-wall tire (like the tioga powerblock), the chain getting bounced over against the tire isn't a show stopper. But if that tire is (for example) a fat knobie, then a knob can catch and foul the chain. (ask me how I know)
I've been more concerned about tyre clearance then ground clearance.
-- John Thurston Juneau, Alaska
I left this thread with lots of suggestions, but may have left the impression that I didn't or wasn't going to do anything with them. So it's time for an update, and to tell you what I have actually have done.
The main thing was to replace the Microshift Marvo Long cage deraileur that came stock on the bike, with a MicroShift R9 medium cage. The R9 is basically the road equivalent of the Marvo, and is the matching rear derailleur to the R9 front derailleur that came on the bike. The Marvo allows a large cog of 28 to 36 teeth. The bike comes with an 11-34 cassette. Going to a 36 large cog would REALLY be pushing the bottom pulley too low, so realistically, 34 is as big as will fit. The Marvo also has a total capacity of 45 teeth. Given my 11-34 cassette (25 diff), and 53-39 crankset (14 diff), I have a total wrap need of 39 teeth. The R9 can wrap up to 39 teeth, so it meets the required wrap, even if barely.
I can already hear some of you saying that I should pick a derailleur with more capacity than I need, but in my experience, manufacturers tend to be conservative on their "max" ratings, so I wasn't worried about bumping up to the limits, and what I've found in the 100+ miles I have ridden this set up, this derailleur works just fine.
Now the good part. If you look at the pictures I have included, you will see:
First, just how close the Marvo comes to the ground. While I didn’t include a picture of the clearance to the tire, it’s less than ½ of an inch. The present tires are 35 mm wide. If I want to do gravel, I'd likely look to use something close to the max the frame is capable of - 1.95 inches / 50 mm. If I do that, I'm looking at 15 mm wider tires, or 7 mm / 0.3 inches less clearance on each side - pretty much all the clearance available with the Marvo.

Old derailleur - nearly touching the ground! Also note the angle of the derailleur, and compare it to the new derailleur below.
And no, I haven't scratched the derailleur up, it's just dirty for riding across puddles from all the rain we've received lately.

Close up of the clearance to the ground
Second, looking at the picture of the two derailleurs side by side, you can see the difference between the cages length. It's about an inch! On top of that, the Marvo derailleur body hangs almost straight down, where as the R9's hangs at about a 45 degree angle.

Third are pictures after changing the derailleur. You can see that there is *A LOT* more clearance to the ground - about an inch more, and the bottom of the cage is even with the rim, not the tire, so if go to a larger tire, I should still have the same clearance I have now.

Clearance to ground with the new derailleur. Also note the 45* angle the body has.

Close up of the new clearance. Note that the cage is now above the tire.

Not a great picture, but you can see the clearance to the tire. And from above, with the cage above the tire, I should have no issues fitting fatter tires.
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I expected to need to significantly shorten the chain, but found that removing 1 link balanced the needs between the two worst case cross chained limits. Bottom line, the clearance issues are solved.
In the end, I'm probably more concerned than I need to be, but I'd rather be safe than sorry. So thank all of you for your input!
Hopefully, this is / will be useful to future readers thinking of buying a new NWT, as something to consider.
The other part I raised in this thread was shifting issues. I received some other good
input on that as well. I used my measuring / adjusting tool (Park
DAG-2.2 Derailleur Hanger Alignment Gauge) when the derailleur
was off, and found a small amount of error. Not much, but enough
that I tweaked it a bit. Whether that was enough deviation to be the
cause I don't know, as I'm still working on getting the shifting
perfect, but at least works well enough to use all gears now, I just have to slightly over shift going to larger cogs, but that's pretty minor.
So, there you have it.
The RD-M6195S is an interesting product, with some interesting limitations:
So if you are running flat bars, can live with 9 gears, and accept an 11t small cog, then it's worth looking at.
There are probably other shifters which can be made to control
it, but its cage will have been designed to handle a 9-speed
chain. Making it control a 10 or 11-speed chain is going to
require a lot of hacking.
Microshift has a super short cage Advent derailleur now that goes up to 38t with enough clearance - https://www.microshift.com/models/rd-m6195s/
The issue is that there is no cross-compatibility with Advent and Shimano and one would need a new cassette, shifter, and RD.
-- John Thurston Juneau, Alaska