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I'd probably work from the ground up - I've actually not run the Kojaks, so
I don't have an A/B comparison. But, I'd swap the tires over to see if it's
more to your liking.
Then I'd take careful look at the hubs. If your rear wheel is not coasting
that long, you may have excessive load on the bearings. If you have
cartridge bearings, make sure that you aren't compressing them when
tightening the rear axle in the fork ends. With the bike in the stand, I
would pull the chain off and see how it functions with no freewheel load. A
lot of time, hubs can act fine until tightened into the frame.
That freewheel sounds a little "new" - hopefully. The White fw has always
felt like it has stronger engagement, but again, my first hand experience
with one has been limited to not-on-the-bike futzing. I don't recall if
there is a tension adjustment on those - you might give White a call. If
it's new, I'd expect the factory grease to be part of the tension issue.
I'd check side load on the bb as well. Those cranks should spin pretty much
forever with no chain attached.
Bear in mind that running a single speed freewheel bicycle is a bit
different than a geared setup. You may find that your personally
"efficiency" - the cadence and effort that you lapse into most often - is a
bit different than the way the bicycle is geared. You may want to figure
out what gearing you tend to end up in on the other bike, then see if you
can match that with the QB.
Also, minor differences in saddle and bars setup can be quite noticeable.
My QB and my Hilsen are set up fairly closley, but when I go from one to the
other, there's always a little feeling of inefficiency at first - the bikes
have different saddles and slightly different positions. Quite simply, the
more miles I put on one bike, the more noticible that is when I switch back
over.
Hope this helps,
- Jim
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Jim Edgar
Cyclo...@earthlink.net
Cyclofiend Bicycle Photo Galleries - http://www.cyclofiend.com
Current Classics - Cross Bikes
Singlespeed - Working Bikes
Gallery updates now appear here - http://cyclofiend.blogspot.com
"Steel's what you want for a messenger bike. Weight. Big basket up front.
Not cardboard with some crazy aramid shit wrapped around it, weighs about as
much as a sandwich."
-- William Gibson, "Virtual Light"
I'll keep you posted.
Pete in CT
Lurker here (who has a SimpleOne frame on order).
This three-minute Park Tool instruction video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9la5VTbeQHo&feature=youtube_gdata_player
is nominally focused on the SRAM Torpedo fixed/free hub, but if you
watch from the 1:23 mark the advice about chain tension is of general
application and helped me to get the hang of tensioning the chains on
my single speed and IGH bikes.
With all good wishes,
lexm
i would also focus on chain tension as the culprit; it's easy, esp. when you're first riding SS or fixed, to focus on derailment to the point of getting it too tight for efficiency. The truth is, single cog drivetrains feel best with the absolute minimum amount of tension needed to prevent derailment. Tension is much more critical in off-road riding or fixed gear riding, where bumps or high-rpm pedaling increase the chances of derailment; for on-road SS riding, it's much easier to err on the side of too slack. But even with a fixed gear, you'd be surprised how slack you can run the chain without any real danger (assuming good chainline, of course); check out pictures of track racers' bikes at rest and you'll see what i mean. The chain should sag just enough to see it when it's at rest.
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Cheers,
David
Redlands, CA
**
“I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an
America that’s the America millions of Americans believe in. That’s
the America I love.”
Found a picture of one of Sheldon's (RIP) old fixed gears, which in my mind demonstrates just the proper amount of tension.
http://sheldonbrown.org/images/ral-int-nospox-big.gif
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 7:24 PM, Jeremy Till <jerem...@gmail.com<mailto:jerem...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Found a picture of one of Sheldon's (RIP) old fixed gears, which in my mind demonstrates just the proper amount of tension.
http://sheldonbrown.org/images/ral-int-nospox-big.gif
Question for the group: Does a sagging bicycle chain follow the shape of a catenary?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catenary (fun reading there).
- Andrew, Berkeley
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Pete
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