scotsbikester
Well-Known Member
No, not metal fatigue but user error. Your chain did not break in outright tension but in a bit of cross-chaining on the cassette where the chain was halfway between two gears and you applied pressure. If you can recall, you'll remember that the chain burst open and the sideplate separated from the rivet.
Had the chain broken in tension, the sideplate and rivet would have remained in place but the sideplate would show a break at its narrowest part - that part exactly in the middle between the two rivets, with a teensy bit of elongation.
That's interesting. I'm (relatively) new to derailleur bikes, though I did build this one myself. It's a 9 x 3, and I tell myself, and other cyclists, that it means I have 3 chainlines which are dead straight. And as long as I'm disciplined about changing chainrings, it's never more than two sprockets "out of line".
I try to let off the pressure to practically nothing when I change, certainly when going up. Sort of pedalling at the same speed as the bike, but with barely any pressure. But I thought that was more to ensure a smooth change. I didn't realise it could possibly cause a broken chain.
Thanks for the info.