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• #2
Wide ..Narrow... Can you explain what you need a bit better
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• #3
I think Middleburn do the biggest range in the uk. You'd probably have to call them directly though.
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• #4
@Si46 I had to google it. It's a type of chainring that has alternating wide then narrow teeth to mesh with chains more snugly (i.e. the gap between the outer plates is wider than inner). I imagine they only work on single chainring setups, since you have to have the chain set onto the correct phase of teeth.
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• #6
Thanks!
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• #7
Interesting - you live and learn. Good luck with your search.
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• #8
Also known as thick 'n' thin, or, the Posh 'n' Becks....
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• #9
probably not, as their quite new for road, and there's not much option for 50+ teeth either.
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• #10
Yeah I was thinking this is probably the case. Just happened to have a 144bcd crankset and wanted to keep costs down on a beater 1x10 setup (chainring being the only thing I spent money on really)
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• #11
If you're not taking it off-road why not just stick an old front mech on as a chain catcher...
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• #12
Suppose I could just increase the low limit so it was stuck in the right position. Now need to find a 3/32 chainring in 144bcd cos currently it's a 1/8th chainring
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• #13
Nah, get a narrow/wide ring. They're pretty cool. I use one on my winter bike and fitted one to the fancy carbon bike for hill climbs. There's something very satisfying in a minimal set up that uses simple but quite new technology to eliminate dropped chains. Looks cool too.
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• #14
I use one but...
cool
...yawn.
Do what gets the bike working.
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• #15
I don't think the narrow/wide ring is going to affect the chair dropping as much as a clutch derailleur, you could always just use a chain catcher like the used in the gold ol'days, before 1x had its own technology.
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• #16
On a rigid/hardtail I'd say n/w is more important. I ran both on my 29er but never actually remembered to turn the clutch on, never dropped the chain...
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• #17
I mean yeah, the "do whatever you want" rule always applies, but the OP did specifically ask about n/w rings.
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• #19
Now need to find a 3/32 chainring in 144bcd
Bear in mind that most 144mm 3/32" rings will be exactly that, i.e. they will work with 8-speed chain but not 11/128" 9/10/11-speed. I've got a Campag one here which is significantly worn on the sides of the teeth which seems to mesh OK with 10-speed chain, but the unworn material is too thick so if you got a NOS one it would probably suck the chain.
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• #20
I'm not disputing that. NW on some cheap 110/130bcd cranks is fun cos it works (and is probably what's going to happen).
Fucks given to 'cool' when sorting your drivechain should number 'zero' - unless you want a sexy Snapchat from a 15 year-old Korean boy that digs your bike that got on Radavist... and comments on every one of your Pedalroom 'builds'.
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• #21
Ok
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• #22
Thinking of doing something similar on newly brought day one, did you ever make a 1x10 using that 144bcd crankset?
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• #23
I didn't unfortunately. Project got scrapped by the other half due to the S-1 rule. Still want it though so I can roll around on a shitty old steel frame with trainers and flat pedals and not give a crap.
Does anyone know of a wide narrow ring in 144bcd? (I have cranks I want to use instead of buying a 110bcd crankset and chainring
Thanks!