DaveReading
Don't suffer fools gladly (must try harder!)
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I've spent a happy afternoon re-indexing the rear derailleur on my tourer, having had to replace the cable, so I thought I'd do the front one too.
I know that you don't use the small/small and large/large chainring/rear cog combinations, but I'm finding other combinations that cause chain rub on either side of the front derailleur. My setup is a 48/36/26 front and an 11-32 8-speed rear. There's no rub in most gears when I'm on the middle ring, nor in the 3/4 highest gears on the large ring and the 3/4 lowest gears on the small ring, so I've still got the full range available. In that case, should I simply ignore the combinations that result in too much chain angle?
That would mean riding mostly on the middle ring (I'm not particularly fast) or is that what most people do anyway?
On a related question, given that the change in gear ratios between adjacent chainwheels is obviously greater than changing up/down on the rear, is changing up on the front and down on the rear simultaneously (or vice versa) a legitimate tactic to ease the transition?
I know that you don't use the small/small and large/large chainring/rear cog combinations, but I'm finding other combinations that cause chain rub on either side of the front derailleur. My setup is a 48/36/26 front and an 11-32 8-speed rear. There's no rub in most gears when I'm on the middle ring, nor in the 3/4 highest gears on the large ring and the 3/4 lowest gears on the small ring, so I've still got the full range available. In that case, should I simply ignore the combinations that result in too much chain angle?
That would mean riding mostly on the middle ring (I'm not particularly fast) or is that what most people do anyway?
On a related question, given that the change in gear ratios between adjacent chainwheels is obviously greater than changing up/down on the rear, is changing up on the front and down on the rear simultaneously (or vice versa) a legitimate tactic to ease the transition?