Campy drivetrain difficulties, advice please...



Status
Not open for further replies.
T

Tony The Tiger

Guest
Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo shifters, Shimano 9 speed Ultegra
cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs PC69 9 speed chain.

Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets, the
chain rubs against the inside of the large (53) chainring.

What is the solution? Change to a narrower (10s chain)? Other ideas?

Thank you kindly for any advice.

TG
 
On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 18:04:45 -0400, tony the tiger wrote:

> Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo shifters, Shimano 9 speed Ultegra
> cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs PC69 9 speed chain.
>
> Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets,
> the chain rubs against the inside of the large
> (53) chainring.
>
> What is the solution? Change to a narrower (10s chain)? Other ideas?

Shift to the big ring?
 
"Steve Palincsar" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
> On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 18:04:45 -0400, tony the tiger wrote:
>
> > Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo shifters, Shimano 9 speed Ultegra
> > cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs PC69 9 speed chain.
> >
> > Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets,
> > the chain rubs against the inside of the large
> > (53) chainring.
> >
> > What is the solution? Change to a narrower (10s chain)? Other ideas?
>
> Shift to the big ring?
Agree or you should be able to "trim" your ergo lever to stop the rubbing...
 
"bfd" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>
> "Steve Palincsar" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
> > On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 18:04:45 -0400, tony the tiger wrote:
> >
> > > Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo
shifters,
> > > Shimano 9 speed Ultegra cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs
> > > PC69 9 speed chain.
> > >
> > > Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower
two
> > > (12, 13) rear sprockets, the chain rubs against the inside of the
large
> > > (53) chainring.
> > >
> > > What is the solution? Change to a narrower (10s chain)? Other ideas?
> >
> > Shift to the big ring?
> Agree or you should be able to "trim" your ergo lever to stop the
rubbing...
>

Bzzzzt. Wrong answer. You cannot stop the chain from dragging on the big ring by "trimming" the
front derailer. As someone else mentioned, the poster should just avoid the extreme chain angles.
Those gears are represented elsewhere.

Robin Hubert
 
>Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets,
>the chain rubs against the inside of the large (53) chainring.

Me: Doctor, it hurts when I do that. Doctor: Well....... don't do that!

I try to shift to the big ring when I'm roughly in the middle of the freewheel, oops, cassette.

Pete Geurds Douglassville, PA
 
> > Shift to the big ring?
> Agree or you should be able to "trim" your ergo lever to stop the rubbing...

Well, I ride in very rolling terrrain and sometimes I like to stay in the middle ring on the short
downhills so I don't have to shift back into it in less than 1 minute when the uphill begins.

As far as trimming w/the ergo lever, that does nothing to help the problem as the front derailleur
does not rub anything, the chain rubs on the inside of the large chainring.

Anyone out there with helpful solutions?

TG
 
tony the tiger wrote:
> As far as trimming w/the ergo lever, that does nothing to help the problem as the front derailleur
> does not rub anything, the chain rubs on the inside of the large chainring.
>
> Anyone out there with helpful solutions?

Welll... the previous posters who said "shift to the big ring" had a point, but if you *don't want*
to do that, there is another option:

Get a BB with adjustable chainline and shift the crank about 1-2mm right. (Alternately, maybe just
get a longer spindle). The old Athena BB's were great for this, or a Phil Wood will do the trick.
This may cause other problems in other places, though - enough to make this a bad idea; you'll have
to try it and find out.

Curiously enough, on my campy 9sp with triple, the chainline suggested the crank was too far away
from the frame, so I've shifted my Athena BB in the other direction about 1.5mm. Upside: good
chainline (yes, I *have* checked frame alignment). Downside: BB cups that were intended to mount
flush to the BB shell stick out 1.5mm on the left, and 1.5mm of shell thread shows on the right.
Also, I had to do some judicious filing of the front derailleur arms where they hit the frame at the
lower limit. 8000 miles later, though, it's worked well for me.

Hope this makes your cornflakes taste better,
--
Mark Janeba remove antispam phrase in address to reply
 
On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 15:04:45 +0000, tony the tiger wrote:

> Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo shifters, Shimano 9 speed Ultegra
> cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs PC69 9 speed chain.
>
> Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets,
> the chain rubs against the inside of the large (53) chainring.

You don't need to use those gears. You can get essentially the same gears with the big ring and a
bigger cog. Most chains will rub in those situations, and if not, then the chainrings are probably
too far apart, which can cause worse problems.

--

David L. Johnson

__o | Deserves death! I daresay he does. Many that live deserve _`\(,_ | death. And some that die
deserve life. Can you give it to (_)/ (_) | them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in
judgement. -- J. R. R. Tolkein
 
On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 19:00:01 +0000, tony the tiger wrote:

> Well, I ride in very rolling terrrain and sometimes I like to stay in the middle ring on the short
> downhills so I don't have to shift back into it in less than 1 minute when the uphill begins.

Heck, rolling terrain is perfect for "alpine" gearing -- which most folks use. Shift the front from
big to middle, for the same cog in the back, and you have uphill/downhill taken care of with one
shift rather than 3.

> Anyone out there with helpful solutions?

If you insist on using these long-reach combinations despite advice not to, then get chainring
spacers to move the big ring out a bit. These are just washers that go between the spider and the
ring. The downside of this is that, if there is too much added space the chain can drop between
the big and middle rings. But maybe you can get enough extra space before this becomes a problem.
Bike shops tend to have just the right size spacers; hardware store washers will have to be ground
down to fit.

--

David L. Johnson

__o | There is always an easy solution to every human problem - neat, _`\(,_ | plausible, and
wrong. --H.L. Mencken (_)/ (_) |
 
Pretty typical behavior. A function of short chainstays and fairly large chain angles. You can
install a small spacer (perhaps 1-2mm) to move the chainline outboard. Of course this will not have
a favorable impact on the 53 + largest cog combination.

R / John
 
tgeraci-<< Here's my setup: Cannondale CAAD5 frame, Chorus 9 speed ergo shifters, Shimano 9 speed
Ultegra cassette, Campy 10 speed Record Triple FD, BB, Crankset, RD. Sachs PC69 9 speed chain. <<
Here's the problem: When in the middle (42) chainring and the lower two (12, 13) rear sprockets, the
chain rubs against the inside of the large (53) chainring.

Have the Record triple BB?

Not sure why, we have installed this a lot w/o the problem you mention.

Peter Chisholm Vecchio's Bicicletteria 1833 Pearl St. Boulder, CO, 80302
(303)440-3535 http://www.vecchios.com "Ruote convenzionali costruite eccezionalmente bene"
 
"David L. Johnson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:<[email protected]>...
> On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 15:04:45 +0000, tony the tiger wrote:
>
>
> You don't need to use those gears. You can get essentially the same gears with the big ring and a
> bigger cog. Most chains will rub in those situations, and if not, then the chainrings are probably
> too far apart, which can cause worse problems.

Thanks to all for your responses. Sounds like the best solution is to just learn to use the large
chainring more. Just never had this problem with my Veloce triple or Ultegra triple, so wondered if
there was anything specific to the setup that was contributing. Probably it is the thinner large 10s
chainring offset slightly towards the middle ring that makes the rubbing happen, and it does sound
like using the large chainring more is the easiest, if not only, solution.

TG
 
"David L. Johnson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sun, 06 Apr 2003 19:00:01 +0000, tony the tiger wrote:
>
> > Well, I ride in very rolling terrrain and sometimes I like to stay in the middle ring on the
> > short downhills so I don't have to shift back into it in less than 1 minute when the uphill
> > begins.
>
> Heck, rolling terrain is perfect for "alpine" gearing -- which most folks use. Shift the front
> from big to middle, for the same cog in the back, and you have uphill/downhill taken care of with
> one shift rather than 3.
>
> > Anyone out there with helpful solutions?
>
> If you insist on using these long-reach combinations despite advice not to, then get chainring
> spacers to move the big ring out a bit. These are just washers that go between the spider and the
> ring. The downside of this is that, if there is too much added space the chain can drop between
> the big and middle rings. But maybe you can get enough extra space before this becomes a problem.
> Bike shops tend to have just the right size spacers; hardware store washers will have to be ground
> down to fit.

Also, poster could use a 42T inner ring instead of the 39. This will also help (but has
drawbacks as well).

Robin Hubert
 
> Have the Record triple BB?
>
> Not sure why, we have installed this a lot w/o the problem you mention.
>
>
> Peter Chisholm Vecchio's Bicicletteria

Yes, have the Record Triple BB.

TG
 
Tony,

tony the tiger wrote:
>>>Shift to the big ring?
>>
>>Agree or you should be able to "trim" your ergo lever to stop the rubbing...
>
>
> Well, I ride in very rolling terrrain and sometimes I like to stay in the middle ring on the short
> downhills so I don't have to shift back into it in less than 1 minute when the uphill begins.
>
> As far as trimming w/the ergo lever, that does nothing to help the problem as the front derailleur
> does not rub anything, the chain rubs on the inside of the large chainring.
>
> Anyone out there with helpful solutions?

Tony, if you are rubbing on the 12T, while in the middle ring (assuming you don't have an 11T as
your smallest), you are kind of stuck, especially if the bike has performance oriented short chain
stays. No matter how you do it, optimizing for the 12T will give you an equally bad chain angle with
your largest cog. You should be able to use the 13T though, which suggests perhaps a minor chain
line problem.

You could look to getting an adjustable bottom bracket but they are darned expensive if you want
something that works correctly with Campagnolo cranks and is durable.

I do not agree with using chainring spacers to push the large ring out since it increases the risk
that the chain will miss shift from the middle ring to the large ring and indeed could jam between
them. A 10s chain will not help since it is narrower but really just a tiny bit.

Measure your bottom bracket and see if reversing it gives you a 1 - 2mm advantage moving the crank
outward from the bottom bracket but don't go beyond that. I also don't recommend much experimenting
here since each time you pull a crank and re-torque it on a square taper spindle, you squish it on a
bit more. With a new chain line, if you clear the 13T easily and even the 12T, you will almost
certainly have problems with two or more of your lower gears, especially while in the big ring.

Good Luck

Terry

>
> TG
 
tony the tiger wrote:
> Mark Janeba <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:<[email protected]>...
>
>>Hope this makes your cornflakes taste better,
>
>
> Cornflakes never taste good. Tony the Tiger only eats FROSTED flakes.

Oops - my mistake! I shoulda known that.
--
Mark Janeba remove antispam phrase in address to reply
 
Status
Not open for further replies.