I've just found this forum, and this thread seems 100% on the mark for the problems I've been having.
Mod Note:
posts moved from the other thread because it's a different topic.
I originally posted my problem and some pics on what turns out to be an American forum
https://www.bikeforums.net/bicycle-...ge-sram-eagle-chain-problem.html#post23737090
Not especially helpful... Will use this one from now on
I think the underlying issue is that today's fancy MTB mechanical parts are very close tolerance and tolerate very little wear. I've had bikes for > 50 years and have never seen this hassle. I had a Sun Shaman MTB (probably 8-10 speed) for 10 years and never changed anything on it. But this YT bike wears out the drive parts very fast. You wear out 1 or 2 chains (as evidenced by it either skipping or sticking to the underside of the front gear) and a new chain turns out to be completely useless (skipping) unless you fit a new cartridge at a scandalous price.
Then if you read reviews of SRAM parts, a lot of people are saying that, e.g. taking a cartridge costing £70 to £350 for apparently the same 12 speed part, anything under say £200 is junk. This is all from SRAM!
I do ~3hrs of tarmac+track each week and have worn my last (£30) SRAM EAGLE chain to the often stated limit of 1/16" per foot, and this has apparently trashed the cartridge, not visibly but enough to make a new SRAM EAGLE XX1 (£80) chain be completely useless, skipping on the 3 lowest gears!
So I put the old chain back on. It was just sticking on the underside of the front gear (where it peels off) and I can live with that. Might get one more year and then I will spend 500 quid re-doing the lot. The XX1 chain can go on then. Frankly this is a ripoff.
The other thing I am seeing is that I can cause skipping on the old chain by a slight misadjustment of the cable. Not sure of the proper name
https://peter-ftp.co.uk/screenshots/20260501158705616.jpg
I may also need a new cable, which looks a messy job. This YT bike needs some special tools already and I struggle with it. This again shows how close the tolerances are on this stuff. The upper derailleur wheel is as closely centred as I can see on the cartridge but < 1mm causes skipping. I wonder whether this is driving the wireless gearchange market
In mechanical terms this is poor engineering.
Mod Note:
posts moved from the other thread because it's a different topic.
I originally posted my problem and some pics on what turns out to be an American forum
https://www.bikeforums.net/bicycle-...ge-sram-eagle-chain-problem.html#post23737090
Not especially helpful... Will use this one from now on

I think the underlying issue is that today's fancy MTB mechanical parts are very close tolerance and tolerate very little wear. I've had bikes for > 50 years and have never seen this hassle. I had a Sun Shaman MTB (probably 8-10 speed) for 10 years and never changed anything on it. But this YT bike wears out the drive parts very fast. You wear out 1 or 2 chains (as evidenced by it either skipping or sticking to the underside of the front gear) and a new chain turns out to be completely useless (skipping) unless you fit a new cartridge at a scandalous price.
Then if you read reviews of SRAM parts, a lot of people are saying that, e.g. taking a cartridge costing £70 to £350 for apparently the same 12 speed part, anything under say £200 is junk. This is all from SRAM!
I do ~3hrs of tarmac+track each week and have worn my last (£30) SRAM EAGLE chain to the often stated limit of 1/16" per foot, and this has apparently trashed the cartridge, not visibly but enough to make a new SRAM EAGLE XX1 (£80) chain be completely useless, skipping on the 3 lowest gears!
So I put the old chain back on. It was just sticking on the underside of the front gear (where it peels off) and I can live with that. Might get one more year and then I will spend 500 quid re-doing the lot. The XX1 chain can go on then. Frankly this is a ripoff.
The other thing I am seeing is that I can cause skipping on the old chain by a slight misadjustment of the cable. Not sure of the proper name
https://peter-ftp.co.uk/screenshots/20260501158705616.jpg
I may also need a new cable, which looks a messy job. This YT bike needs some special tools already and I struggle with it. This again shows how close the tolerances are on this stuff. The upper derailleur wheel is as closely centred as I can see on the cartridge but < 1mm causes skipping. I wonder whether this is driving the wireless gearchange market
In mechanical terms this is poor engineering.
Last edited by a moderator: