mickle
innit
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It's the result of heavy handed pedalling through gear shifts and/or there's a bent tooth or a burr somewhere.
It's the result of heavy handed pedalling through gear shifts and/or there's a bent tooth or a burr somewhere.
Mod lurking in the mechanics section Note:that observation seems useful. I will check on that. Thanks. The post can be locked.
A routine for mitigating this risk is easily combined with @mickle ing one's chain. Use a doubled kitchen towel (cloth would be less sensitive) to wipe and if there's an incipient crack in one of the outer plates (mine all happened radially from the pin, never as per (stock) image shared in post #6) then the paper will(may) 'catch'. Do not ignore that 'catch': find the link and check.I've snapped one or two chains in all my years riding, but they have usually cracked on the link, then you get a tell tale tinkle noise, so I've stopped to check before it's gone, or it's been found during chain oiling. Check, ah broken. Remove link, carry on, bin chain when home. Cross chaining doesn't do chains good, neither does lots of poor shifting.
Always bin a chain after a break, you don't know what damage it's done to other links.
The very idea of 'closing a thread' in Mechanics and Repairs - never, never, never (even lubrication wars).Mod
We like to discuss things at length here
Please do come back report on your findings.
I've been reminiscing about that time in the 80s when I broke a chain. One thing I remember was that there was a "click" happening that preceded it. I remember finding that funny because it wasn't in time with my pedalling and it wasn't in time with the wheel rotation. It had its own, slower rhythm. What could it be? ... One per chain rev as I soon learned.
So if you ever get a repeated click at unusual intervals - check your chain.
I was on a software forum once and searched for a thread discussing a particular technical issue. I found one and was about to post there when I saw that a mod had declared the issue handled, and the thread closed. Then I saw that the thread had not been locked so I posted anyway, explaining that I had new, relevant information to add.The very idea of 'closing a thread' in Mechanics and Repairs - never, never, never (even lubrication wars).
I did, and did... I found that the plate on one side of a link had broken and the opposite one was about to! Good job I stopped when I did - I was on my singlespeed bike and standing to sprint up a short 8% ramp. That could have ended in tears!So if you ever get a repeated click at unusual intervals - check your chain.
Imagine locking a thread about threadlock.The only time that threads should be locked is if they are completely irrelevant, on banned topics, or have descended into unpleasant arguments.