I'm thinking about the gearing for the Brompton conversion. The first thing I had to do was learn how to do the calculation! My Thorn Rohloff-equipped MTB has a 44T chainring and 13T sprocket. It's a 26" wheel. This gives about 71 gear inches. The gearing is just right for my normal daily rides. A standard 50T chainring on a Brompton with a 13T sprocket gives 61 gear inches. If I specified a 54T chainring that would still give only 66 gear inches. To achieve similar gearing to the Thorn I would need a 58T chainring on the Brompton. My question is this: between two very dissimilar bikes such as these will 71 gear inches feel the same on each or are there other forces in play?
My thoughts go as follows:
- you are set on the wheel size
- you are basically set on the 13t sprocket (to achieve a usable development with 349 size wheels)
- so your only variable is the size of the chainring.
The Rohloff's direct gear is the 11th, though there's no real relevant difference in drag between the gears. Still it seems a good idea trying to have the 11th (or close to it) as the standard gear for your typical riding in the flat (als you then have enough room to go higher with three more gears and massive to go lower when it get's hilly). The lower end is not really a problem with the Rohloff on a Brompton - it will basically always be short enough in real life. I'd try to avoid the 7th for typical riding as it is the noisiest gear.
So, depending from your typical speed and your typical favorite cadence you can find the appropriate size of the chainwheel. I use ritzelrechner for that where you have a lot of vaiables, a good visiualization and you can compare two different setups, too:
https://ritzelrechner.de/?GR=RLSH&K...DV=gearInches&GR2=RLSH&KB2=54&RZ2=13&UF2=1330
Here I set the cadence to 75rpm (which is about my personal standard, your's may be different) and as I rather use meters of development than gear inches I created two screenshots:
Here we go with meters of development and km/h for the same setup:
Following the 11th gear rule I'd have to go to something like a 60t chainring to align my typical speed and cadence for the Brommi (in the sense to have my favorite meters of development in 11th). In reality I am running the 50t quite happily at the moment but consider to go a little higher (but not as high as 60t, maybe 54) longterm. Just that it would be a bigger operation as I currently run the old bottom bracket along with the old fixed chainwheel on that bike and a change is not urgent, so I avoid all that hassle for the time being.

With 60t my highest gear would be ridiculously high as well - I'd never use it. To have some reserve for a real steep ascent seems more reasonabe to me.