Transmission racket; any ideas??
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Transmission racket; any ideas??
Hi, I'm just after some ideas as I've exhausted mine with an issue I'm having.
I sent my bike to the local Bike Project (local training charity thing) for a new BB and while it was there got a service too. Last weekend I didn't check it before I went for a short ride with a mate who's new to biking and in every gear there was a chattering as if the gears weren't indexed right. I stopped several times to try adjusting them, looked at the derailleur and even loosened the cable to start from scratch, but to not avail. It would change fine and run quiet with the bike off the floor just spinning it, but as soon as there was pressure actually riding the chattering was back. Luckily my mate was happy for the breather each time! Thankfully it wasn't a long ride as I was worried about permanent damage being done.
Anyway I've just started from scratch again in the shed today. The derailleur and hanger are both straight, the sprockets and chain rings don't seem unduly worn (2400km on them) and it had a new chain on as part of the service and the new BB seems fine too.
I did notice they'd put the b-screw in a ridiculous amount (must have been a good inch between the jockey wheel and sprockets) so I adjusted that and again it was all running quiet and shifting well on the bike stand. Took it out for a check on the road and again it's chattering in every gear! I've tried adjusting with the barrel adjuster a notch at a time from too slack to too tight and the just noise doesn't go, although as you'd expect the indexing changes.
An additional annoyance is they changed my front derailleur cable and didn't put the barrel adjuster back on. Luckily I had a spare, but they'd cut the cable short enough that with the spare adjuster on I could only just get enough to clamp it
I'll take it back to the Bike Project next week and get them to sort it if needs be, but I thought may be some one here has an other idea I could try? I'd rather not have the hassle of taking it back and aren't so inspired to trust them if I can sort it myself.
Any ideas please? I'm sick of pissing about in a cold shed
I sent my bike to the local Bike Project (local training charity thing) for a new BB and while it was there got a service too. Last weekend I didn't check it before I went for a short ride with a mate who's new to biking and in every gear there was a chattering as if the gears weren't indexed right. I stopped several times to try adjusting them, looked at the derailleur and even loosened the cable to start from scratch, but to not avail. It would change fine and run quiet with the bike off the floor just spinning it, but as soon as there was pressure actually riding the chattering was back. Luckily my mate was happy for the breather each time! Thankfully it wasn't a long ride as I was worried about permanent damage being done.
Anyway I've just started from scratch again in the shed today. The derailleur and hanger are both straight, the sprockets and chain rings don't seem unduly worn (2400km on them) and it had a new chain on as part of the service and the new BB seems fine too.
I did notice they'd put the b-screw in a ridiculous amount (must have been a good inch between the jockey wheel and sprockets) so I adjusted that and again it was all running quiet and shifting well on the bike stand. Took it out for a check on the road and again it's chattering in every gear! I've tried adjusting with the barrel adjuster a notch at a time from too slack to too tight and the just noise doesn't go, although as you'd expect the indexing changes.
An additional annoyance is they changed my front derailleur cable and didn't put the barrel adjuster back on. Luckily I had a spare, but they'd cut the cable short enough that with the spare adjuster on I could only just get enough to clamp it
I'll take it back to the Bike Project next week and get them to sort it if needs be, but I thought may be some one here has an other idea I could try? I'd rather not have the hassle of taking it back and aren't so inspired to trust them if I can sort it myself.
Any ideas please? I'm sick of pissing about in a cold shed
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Stiff link or new chain not getting on with the rest of the transmission?
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
I did think about the chain.
Don't know what they put on, could it be the 9 or 11 speed rather than 10? Wrong way around, but can't see a direction arrow?
I'll go check for a stiff link and have a close look for any details on it.
Ta
Don't know what they put on, could it be the 9 or 11 speed rather than 10? Wrong way around, but can't see a direction arrow?
I'll go check for a stiff link and have a close look for any details on it.
Ta
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Its a 10 speed shimano HG 4601 chain they've put on, writing on outside (so right way) and can't find a stiff link. However, the transmission is SRAM, but would that make a difference??
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Maybe the new chain on an old drivetrain? If it is, it'll bed-in & eventually quieten down. Might take between 50-150km though..
Ever Feel Like You're Being Orbited?!
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Like Jurassic, my first thought would be new chain on old rings; is there much sign of hooking or extended 'U's between sprockets? - EDIT: and like what wotsits says too!!
One other thought - is the rear wheel located fully into the frame? Only needs to be to be located a fraction out of square for the cassette to be slightly out of line.
Another thought - is there any play in the freehub? (although that is unlikely to cause what you have I'd have thought).
One other thought - is the rear wheel located fully into the frame? Only needs to be to be located a fraction out of square for the cassette to be slightly out of line.
Another thought - is there any play in the freehub? (although that is unlikely to cause what you have I'd have thought).
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
-
- Posts: 8144
- Joined: Mon Mar 18, 2013 9:56 am
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Has the chain been fed through the rear derailleur correctly (the right side of the tab)?
-
- Posts: 224
- Joined: Fri Jun 14, 2013 5:40 pm
- Location: Leeds
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
@ scotroutes,
i thought i was the only one stupid enough to do this.....seems not.
check on both the smallest and largest cassette sprockets
i thought i was the only one stupid enough to do this.....seems not.
check on both the smallest and largest cassette sprockets
- whitestone
- Posts: 7868
- Joined: Thu Dec 04, 2014 10:20 am
- Location: Skipton(ish)
- Contact:
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Cough, splutter I don't know what you meanmtbmarkymark wrote:@ scotroutes,
i thought i was the only one stupid enough to do this.....seems not.
check on both the smallest and largest cassette sprockets
Better weight than wisdom, a traveller cannot carry
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Chainline - have they replaced any spacers on the cranks?for a new BB and while it was there got a service too.
edit - Have you got a Shadow RD?
I find on an used groupset this does make a difference.
Zazen - nothing happens next this is it.
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Right... the chain line through the RD is fine and no it's not a shadow, its a sram x5.
Seems I can only upload one attachement so here's the cassette
Seems I can only upload one attachement so here's the cassette
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Front rings, sram x5
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Bottom jockey, could get a pic of top, but its the same. Should it be spikey??
The whole chain set has done 2400km, I can see more wear on small ring,but does it look bad? I do have a 11-32t cassette I could try on tomorrow, but whats the verdict on wear? I've pulled the chain on both front rings and cassette and it doesn't come off the rings much at all.
The whole chain set has done 2400km, I can see more wear on small ring,but does it look bad? I do have a 11-32t cassette I could try on tomorrow, but whats the verdict on wear? I've pulled the chain on both front rings and cassette and it doesn't come off the rings much at all.
Last edited by Moder-dye on Sat Nov 25, 2017 6:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 8144
- Joined: Mon Mar 18, 2013 9:56 am
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
I've seen it a few times. Usually a customer arriving at the shop with a "noisy transmission".....mtbmarkymark wrote:@ scotroutes,
i thought i was the only one stupid enough to do this.....seems not.
check on both the smallest and largest cassette sprockets
Edit: get that jockey wheel changed!
You can keep it for re-use as a ninja death-star
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Chainline - have they replaced any spacers on the cranks?Mariner wrote:for a new BB and while it was there got a service too.
I'm not aware of any spacers on the crank before or missing. Basically I don't know. The BB looks and feels fine is all I can say...
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Yeh, guessed those death stars might not be right! Is that likely the issue with a new chain? What about the cassette and rings?ScotRoutes wrote:
Edit: get that jockey wheel changed!
You can keep it for re-use as a ninja death-star
- whitestone
- Posts: 7868
- Joined: Thu Dec 04, 2014 10:20 am
- Location: Skipton(ish)
- Contact:
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
The noise of a chain trying to jump gear is different from that of a new chain/old cassette mismatch.
How old's the cassette? I find I can get two, possibly three, chains per cassette if I change them soon enough. They take a little time to adjust/wear in. If I leave the chain too long then I leave it until it gets very worn and then change the cassette at the same time.
Edit: This is what jockey wheels should look like - http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/s?q= ... cat=direct
How old's the cassette? I find I can get two, possibly three, chains per cassette if I change them soon enough. They take a little time to adjust/wear in. If I leave the chain too long then I leave it until it gets very worn and then change the cassette at the same time.
Edit: This is what jockey wheels should look like - http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/s?q= ... cat=direct
Better weight than wisdom, a traveller cannot carry
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
It's a constant chattering in all gears, big ring and small ring even when the gears are indexed and working. The cassette and rings have 2400km on them with one chain. On my road bike I change the chain each year, 5-6000km.whitestone wrote:The noise of a chain trying to jump gear is different from that of a new chain/old cassette mismatch.
How old's the cassette? I find I can get two, possibly three, chains per cassette if I change them soon enough. They take a little time to adjust/wear in. If I leave the chain too long then I leave it until it gets very worn and then change the cassette at the same time.
Edit: found some sram x5 jockeys for £10 so now know what they should look like LOL!
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Hard (for me) to tell from the photos but your cassette doesn't look too bad, your jockey wheel is worn but shouldn't be problematic but... your chainrings appear worn, especially the inner.
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Yeh just looked at new front crank set (£70) as dont seem to be able to just buy the rings and the inner is definitely worn in comparison, but the chattering is in big and smallpsling wrote:Hard (for me) to tell from the photos but your cassette doesn't look too bad, your jockey wheel is worn but shouldn't be problematic but... your chainrings appear worn, especially the inner.
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Ordered a new inner ring and jockey wheels on the basis that they're worn anyway...
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
I've done it exactly twice, but seen it on others a few times. The first time I was in a hurry, chucked the chain on and sprinted off down the road, pretty much sawed through the tab. Second time I stopped after about two strokes!I've seen it a few times
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Sorted
I think it was just worn drive chain not happy with a new chain.
Changed the ninja throwing star jockey wheels; spot the difference... And also the replaced inner chain ring which was looking pretty ninja too. The cassette looked OK to me, but I replaced it anyway with smaller (11-30t) a hardly used one I had.
I guess it shows the difference in wear between off road and on road, the drive chain had only done 2500km from new; hardly a long weekender for some of you out there
So, I'm happy again, atleast until Wednesday when I see the consultant about a knee replacement
I think it was just worn drive chain not happy with a new chain.
Changed the ninja throwing star jockey wheels; spot the difference... And also the replaced inner chain ring which was looking pretty ninja too. The cassette looked OK to me, but I replaced it anyway with smaller (11-30t) a hardly used one I had.
I guess it shows the difference in wear between off road and on road, the drive chain had only done 2500km from new; hardly a long weekender for some of you out there
So, I'm happy again, atleast until Wednesday when I see the consultant about a knee replacement
Re: Transmission racket; any ideas??
Inner ring (24t), mistakenly replaced with a 22t, but my knee will like me for that