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I disagree. The majority of tensioners, like the one in the photo, push DOWN, ie the jockey wheel should be inside the chain, and the arm pivots away from the chain stay to keep the correct tension.I had the same 'problem', assuming you have the same tensioner as me and it looks like you do. It's on upside down i.e. it's supposed to push up from the bottom - not pushing down like yours is.
I disagree. The majority of tensioners, like the one in the photo, push DOWN, ie the jockey wheel should be inside the chain, and the arm pivots away from the chain stay to keep the correct tension.
If yours was once working ok, as I suspect it was, the cause of the slack chain is either dirt preventing easy pivoting, or it's overtightened at the pivot, or possibly a broken spring. Easy to check, easy to clean, and not much more difficult to adjust the tension with an Allen key.
A few tensioners, usually the much more expensive ones like Surly ones, are supplied with two different mirror image springs, one of which you use, depending whether you want the jockey wheel inside or outside the chain, ie pushing down towards the ground or up towards the chainstay. Pushing-up types are more likely to be used on competition bikes so you can have better chain wrap.
It's tricky isn't it. We've had another newbie just now ( @chibbz_2997 ) who does a 'John Nott'. @vickster was super-optimistic/charitable.OP only popped in for a day...
My Planet X 'Doofer' tensioner was supposed to pull the chain down but I had problems with the chain coming off on bumpy roads. I fiddled about with the Doofer and got it to push up instead. No dropped chains in thousands of kms of riding since then!Cool. No problem with you on my part Big John. Nothing wrong with your way at all but it is in a very small minority. I've never seen a factory-fitted tensioner pushing up.
My point was only that the vast majority of tensioners on single sprockets like this apply their tension away from the chainstay.
Here's my tensioner, which has been on the bike for years and works perfectly despite Espressos 'disagreement'. Before anyone remarks on the state of the bike (as is usually the case on here) this is a well used 'pub' bike and purposely kept unpimped. The smarter it looks the more likely it'll go walkies. I will, however, agree that most are fitted on the inside of the chain pushing down but obviously this one is fitted pushing up.
That's what I decided... Better to have the tensioner helping to wrap the chain round the sprocket rather than helping to peel it off!Makes sense at that’s what derailleurs do with the top jockey wheel. Same principles.
My Planet X 'Doofer' tensioner was supposed to pull the chain down but I had problems with the chain coming off on bumpy roads. I fiddled about with the Doofer and got it to push up instead. No dropped chains in thousands of kms of riding since then!
I think my problem might have been that I was recycling sprockets from old cassettes. They were half-worn, and (obviously) designed to allow the chain to come off when gear-shifting. A proper singlespeed sprocket would be designed to retain the chain!