Getting a chain back in the box

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CharleyFarley

Senior Member
Location
Japan
This isn't the first time I tried this, and I haven't succeeded, yet. It's a magic trick that only the chain makers know. Take a new chain out of the box and then try to put it back in. I coiled this chain up as tightly as I could, and it would not go back in the box. They must have some machine that knows how to do it because they must do thousands of them, and I doubt the chains are packed by hand. :wacko:

Incidentally, this chain is to replace a chain that I bought in a bike shop November 23rd, 2020. It needed 122 links so they took a new chain and added the extra links. My Park CC-2 tool now showed it 75% worn, and that's when Park suggests a new chain. I ride this beach cruiser 30 miles each week, and I fail to see how I wore it out so quickly. 600 miles?


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ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
I ride this beach cruiser 30 miles each week, and I fail to see how I wore it out so quickly. 600 miles?
Beach = sand/salt water = grinding paste? :whistle:
 
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CharleyFarley

CharleyFarley

Senior Member
Location
Japan
Beach = sand/salt water = grinding paste? :whistle:
I'm intimately acquainted with sand grinding paste. When I was a teen we moved from London to the east coast. I took my bike on the beach early in the morning and raced along the damp, hard sand, and as I approached the breakwater, I'd stand on one pedal and spin the back end around, kicking up sand. It didn't do the Sturmey Archer gear any good, as I could no longer change gears.

I've seen some guys taking fat bikes on the beach. I won't do that because I don't like sand in my chain.

I'm about six miles from a beach. I only ride on a blacktop road. No salt water or any water. And I clean and lube the chain with Rock N' Roll lube every 100 miles. There's no way it should have worn out in 600 miles.

I just checked my records and saw that I paid $14.45 (£10.44) for a new chain from the bike shop last November. I don't like to think they sold me a used chain but it looks very much like they did, but I won't say they did it, knowingly. I saw him take it out of a pack that looked like Shimano. He laid it on his bench to add some more links, then put it in a plastic bag. The gear changes seemed a bit clunky but I kind of expect that from a 7-speed, compared to a 10-speed. This new chain, though, is very smooth when it changes. I hung the old and the new chains together, and there was approximately a 1/2" (1.25 cm) difference, so it was definitely worn. This is the third chain on this cruiser, from new. 1800 miles, so my original chain gave me 1200 miles which doesn't seem a lot. By comparison my Specialized fat bike 10-speed is on its second chain after about 8,000 miles, and is doing well at 10,000. .
 
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CharleyFarley

CharleyFarley

Senior Member
Location
Japan
How are you doing this?
I know it's a controversial issue so however I'm doing it, I'll stick with it. Some time ago a guy told me that he takes his chain off and has a bike shop clean it for him. Then he complained that the bike shop didn't do a good enough job so he had to clean it, again, himself. Apparently, there are extremists in everything. Anyway, I clean the chain on my cruiser the same way I clean the chain on my fat bike. That chain was good for 8,000 miles, so my cleaning method can't be that bad; it certainly wasn't the cause of the chain wearing out at 600 miles.
 
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CharleyFarley

CharleyFarley

Senior Member
Location
Japan
Hmm it does rather sound like you were sold an old 'new' chain!
I don't see how it could have been a new one, and I don't think the bike shop knew it wasn't new. They've been around for over 40 years and it wouldn't be worth risking their reputation for the sake of a used chain. The only thing I can think of is that someone else bought a new chain, put it on their bike, cleaned their old one and put it back in the pack and asked for a refund. Other than that, could it have been a factory defect?
 
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CharleyFarley

CharleyFarley

Senior Member
Location
Japan
How to get a chain back in the box?
You answered your own question a few days ago! Here.
Yeah, but they don't work so well like that. My wife came up with an answer which I 'm going to test, today, using the old chain and the plastic box. I had wound the new chain as tightly as I could, but she said it should be done in straight lines, zig-zagging it back and forth. I have a feeling she's right. She always is! :smile:
 

T4tomo

Legendary Member
Yeah, but they don't work so well like that. My wife came up with an answer which I 'm going to test, today, using the old chain and the plastic box. I had wound the new chain as tightly as I could, but she said it should be done in straight lines, zig-zagging it back and forth. I have a feeling she's right. She always is! :smile:
She is, think Z-bed rather than Swiss roll.
 

DaveReading

Don't suffer fools gladly (must try harder!)
Location
Reading, obvs
Yeah, but they don't work so well like that. My wife came up with an answer which I 'm going to test, today, using the old chain and the plastic box. I had wound the new chain as tightly as I could, but she said it should be done in straight lines, zig-zagging it back and forth. I have a feeling she's right. She always is! :smile:

Yes, you want the half-links in adjacent rows to be 50% offset, which is impossible to achieve with a spiral.
 
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