Of course my "main" rides are fixed, so even four usable gears seems
like loooxery, to quote the Yorkshireman.
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And yet, 1x7s and 1x9s are known to throw the chain. Some bikes do it
so often owners have claimed their bikes are possessed by evil spirits.
Here, for example http://www.foldsoc.co.uk/mchaink.html is an article
about a chain keeper devised to prevent AM-7 and AM-8 Alex Moulton
bicycles from thowing chains. Trust me, if it didn't happen nobody
would bother with devising such things!
I too have an IRD FW/Phil-hub combination in back (LX RR derailer), Sugino XD2 24-36-46 up front (IRD alpina-d derailer). I'm using a 7-spd 13-28 freewheel, not the 13-32, though. So my experience may differ from yours. Of course, where and how one rides I'm sure has a big effect.
I'll post any results.
Yours,
Thomas Lynn Skean
On Mon, Oct 10, 2011 at 9:01 AM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
<thil...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've done fder-free doubles many times. One chainring that I use always, and one bailout ring. Never had issues with dropping the chain, but I suppose if you were doing cyclocross or other rough riding, it may be an issue. Usually I run a triple with the outer ring replaced by a Salsa Crossing Guard.
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Probably not, since mostly from what I've read this happens on bumpy
roads. IOW, it's not the angle that sets this off, it's the fact that
the chain is jumping up and down. From what I've read. I have no
personal experience.
Yeah, it's more to do with slack in the system while negotiating bumpy
terrain. Doesn't necessarily have to be off pavement - sharp ripples can
just throw a wave into the chain that the derailleur can't tension out.
- J
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