Here I am stuck in the house with sleet falling outside and I began pondering on the problem with the 11 tooth cog which so often skips.
Generally it is thought that it is because the cog is too small and the chain simply does not get sufficient wrap around the cog.
But, in my experience, the skip is only momentary, as though it tried to change down a gear and changed its mind, rather than a full blown skidding over the tops of the teeth.
Often, the 11 t cog shows little sign of wear.
My bike has 8 cogs and one chain wheel. When I first bought a 21 speed bike, the retailer told me that it was only really a 9 speed, in that the 3 chain wheels lined up with cogs 2,4 and 6 and the largest chain wheel should never be run on the largest cog because that would be pulling the chain sideways too much.
So, does my present set up with one chain wheel and 8 cogs present too much 'Cross chaining' for the 11 t cog?
When the weather clears, I propose to dismantle my cassette and rebuild it with 5 gears, the ones that I mainly use and fill up the outer 3 spaces with the left over gears which I will never use.
This should reduce the cross chain stress on the 11t cog.
A further thought is that the cog itself might flex under strain, sufficiently enough to allow the chain rivets to contact the lifting sectors on the side of the next cog and thus apparently skip.
So, a further experiment will be to grind off the lifting segments on the cog next to the 11t cog.
My reason for posting is to see if anyone else has tried these remedies?
Generally it is thought that it is because the cog is too small and the chain simply does not get sufficient wrap around the cog.
But, in my experience, the skip is only momentary, as though it tried to change down a gear and changed its mind, rather than a full blown skidding over the tops of the teeth.
Often, the 11 t cog shows little sign of wear.
My bike has 8 cogs and one chain wheel. When I first bought a 21 speed bike, the retailer told me that it was only really a 9 speed, in that the 3 chain wheels lined up with cogs 2,4 and 6 and the largest chain wheel should never be run on the largest cog because that would be pulling the chain sideways too much.
So, does my present set up with one chain wheel and 8 cogs present too much 'Cross chaining' for the 11 t cog?
When the weather clears, I propose to dismantle my cassette and rebuild it with 5 gears, the ones that I mainly use and fill up the outer 3 spaces with the left over gears which I will never use.
This should reduce the cross chain stress on the 11t cog.
A further thought is that the cog itself might flex under strain, sufficiently enough to allow the chain rivets to contact the lifting sectors on the side of the next cog and thus apparently skip.
So, a further experiment will be to grind off the lifting segments on the cog next to the 11t cog.
My reason for posting is to see if anyone else has tried these remedies?