MacBludgeon said:
which is not what was said on here, Johny C was saying he had a 2 ring setup with the outer ring lined up as if it was the middle of a triple. This gives access to the full rear cassette and covers most of his riding. his inner ring, in the same place as the inner ring on a triple is only used for really steep bits, so small to big.
You get the same impact if you ride a triple but never use the outer chainring.
My last word on the subject.
I don't know precisely what spacings johnyC has used on his bike, but standard road doubles have the large ring at 46mm from the bike centre line with the small ring at 41mm.
Road triples are setup with the middle at 45mm. So any adjustments johnyC has done are likely to only improve matters from the universally agreed bad big / big combo by a matter of 1mm.
Even assuming his big ring is where the normal middle ring would be on a triple, I personally do not use the middle ring / big sprocket combination. I only use the middle 6 cogs on my 10 speed cassette as I prefer to avoid what I would consider to be a bad chain line, with resultant increased wear. The photo of the chain running back from the rings to the cassette doesn’t change my view. I would consider that to be an unacceptable chain line. Whether I like it or not is not really relevant, it obviously works for johnyC, but I brought it up because he said triples give worse chain lines yet seems to have devised a system which makes greater use of sub optimal chain lines!
IIRC correctly, the 9 speed cassette is actually 1mm wider than a ten speed one (hence the requirement for a spacer on a ten speed cassette), so a 9 speed is likely to have a worse chain line than a 10 speed at extreme lines.
In addition, I would find the jumps in gears unacceptable on johnyC’s setup. By using a 46 tooth ring with 11-32 cassette the gaps between each gear are almost double that of a 42 ring with a 12-25 cassette.
So I would say that JohnyC’s setup is interesting and he is well pleased with it, but that it is non standard for a reason.