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• #152
Keep it to yourself Windy81
Cheers Superprecise
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• #153
ok i was being sarcastic. yes pull the wheel back, or adjust the tension with the tensioning pulleys if you have em with the horizontal dropouts.
just seems obvious thats all.
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• #154
Keep it to yourself Windy81
cmon man, lighten up
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• #155
wasn't me !!
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• #156
^^^^haha. what's the odd one out, a washing machine, a toaster, a dishwasher and a woman?
a toaster because it doesn't leak when it's fucked
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• #157
http://www.sheldonbrown.com/fixed.html
and chain tension... actually read the lot its great.
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• #158
there is a question that plays on my mind....
....how much tension do i want on my chain? so there is NO wobble atall or do i need to have a little slack?
also, is there a certian beneficial way to set up the back wheenls position?
taa
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• #159
not tight, but not sagging either. snug. chain tensioners help get it right imo.
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• #160
yup, you wanna little movement make sure the wheel spins freely, whan lifting off the groung and spinning the cranks,
and chain tugs help. -
• #161
1/2" vertical play.
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• #162
it has about that much slack currently so i will just leave it.
so yeah, i got my bike about two or three weeks ago, struck a deal with a fellow lfgss'er to get a front brake from them and due to their personal reasons they were unable to post it straight away and anyway, i waited for a brake for a while then the deal went off after contact and im no longer getting a brake from them, my friend offered my one BUT......
i like cycling it without a brake, it MAKES me learn how to stop rather than being "oh theres a hill, i cant be arsed learning now, i will just go fast and use my brake at the bottom" instead i go as fast as i feel confident then next time, a bit faster and so on an so forth.....
maybe i will not get a brake, just keep it real without one! i realise this might be a stupid idea as its my first fixed gear.....but........ehhhhh.......ehhhhhhhh............you need to get your heart going at least once a day!
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• #163
Join us next week, when cuppa T decides to take up brushing his teeth with a rather irritated live weasel.
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• #164
Question - my new single speed has the chain set right at the very tightest part of the horizontal dropout which makes it ridiculously hard to remove the wheel. Asked my bike shop to add a link to the chain during it's first service and the mechanic told me - it is normal to have it that way to allow for chain stretch...
Does anyone think this is right? or shoudl I insist they add a link for me?
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• #165
add a link. though they'll prob charge you more than it would cost to do it your self, even buying the tools.
Question to all: what link extractor do you use for 1/8" chain? I've broken a couple and am not happy with the current one I have, it's weak and gonna break soon...
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• #166
Been 'breaking' 1/8" chains with the tool on my Topeak Alien for years - still going strong.
No-one ever got around to answering my question about what (non-expensive) chaintool works fine with 10spd chains (especially Campag)...
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• #167
i got a topeak minitool and that breaks chains easy peasy. in fact, i broke one this very morning.
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• #168
Who cares? What do you use on your 10spd?
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• #169
Join us next week, when cuppa T decides to take up brushing his teeth with a rather irritated live weasel.
Cnt! i spat my coffee out on reading that....
"Adventures of Cuppa T". i can't wait to see where this goes next... -
• #170
"Adventures of Cuppa T". i can't wait to see where this goes next...
casualty?
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• #172
why would he bother? sjs have one in his size for less money...
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• #173
touché
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• #174
Okay, pj - thanks for the subliminal. I never order from there though, but will get this one they listed (elsewhere):
It looks comfy with its fetishistic rubberization, it's cheap, and worth a punt - I'm not spending £££s on a tool I'll probably use once every 3 years or something.@Tommy - you're right about 10spd. I still love my 9spd stuff, but those gheys have started to perfect the 10spd technology, and being a climber, I love my close-ratio cassettes. With 10spd, I've got 9 useable sprockets in the big ring, so maybe 10spd is the real 9spd?
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• #175
yeah.
yeah that'll do. just pull it back dead hard and tighten at the same time. the chain should be very snug but not tight. chaintugs make the process a little more controlled but aren't totally necessary. good luck!