Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Classic & Vintage
Reload this Page >

How Does Chain Length Affect SI?

Search
Notices
Classic & Vintage This forum is to discuss the many aspects of classic and vintage bicycles, including musclebikes, lightweights, middleweights, hi-wheelers, bone-shakers, safety bikes and much more.

How Does Chain Length Affect SI?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 06-18-18, 01:32 AM
  #1  
johnggold
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Midlands
Posts: 94

Bikes: Hetchins, Dawes, Raleigh, Holdsworth, Standard Cycle Co, and others

Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 34 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 6 Times in 2 Posts
How Does Chain Length Affect SI?

I have been scratch building a road bike using a Trek compact frame,and mostly Shimano 105 components. Mostly I build older vintege bikes, so its not often I touch 10 speed gears.

Normally I measure new chain length using big to big +2 links, but I had read that for 10 speeds you should use small to small and thread the chain through the derailleur, so I used that method.

However, when I cam to set up the SI, I could not get it to work. The derailleur did not seem to be indexing and would not reach the two largest cogs. I adjusted the angle in case the derailleur was hitting the cogs, I double checked parts numbers in case I had a non 10 speed, changed the outer cables, as I had been a bit tight - no change.

The only change I had made was to measure the chain. So I split the chain, re-measured my normal way and there was a 4 link difference (too long). I rechecked the new way, and I appeared tom have that correct. I had images to check against as well as instructions.

As soon as I shortened the chain, everything worked, but I cannot get my head around how this impacted on the SI. Nothing else was changed.

Can anyone provide an explanation.
johnggold is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 02:16 AM
  #2  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
What's an SI?
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 04:23 AM
  #3  
jimmuller 
What??? Only 2 wheels?
 
jimmuller's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Boston-ish, MA
Posts: 13,434

Bikes: 72 Peugeot UO-8, 82 Peugeot TH8, 87 Bianchi Brava, 76? Masi Grand Criterium, 74 Motobecane Champion Team, 86 & 77 Gazelle champion mondial, 81? Grandis, 82? Tommasini, 83 Peugeot PF10

Mentioned: 189 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1222 Post(s)
Liked 645 Times in 232 Posts
By "10 speeds" do you mean 2x5 gearing, a.k.a. 10-speed bicycle, or that newfangled system where they name them based on the number of sprockets on the rear? Either way, I would think the danger of breaking the RD when you shift to larger sprockets or chainring would be the same as on any other gear combination.
__________________
Real cyclists use toe clips.
With great bikes comes great responsibility.
jimmuller
jimmuller is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 09:33 AM
  #4  
SJX426 
Senior Member
 
SJX426's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Fredericksburg, Va
Posts: 9,579

Bikes: '65 Frejus TDF, '73 Bottecchia Giro d'Italia, '83 Colnago Superissimo, '84 Trek 610, '84 Trek 760, '88 Pinarello Veneto, '88 De Rosa Pro, '89 Pinarello Montello, '94 Burley Duet, 97 Specialized RockHopper, 2010 Langster, Tern Link D8

Mentioned: 73 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1607 Post(s)
Liked 2,213 Times in 1,103 Posts
Cannot reason why chain length would impact shifting unless the limits of the RD are reached. Even then, it doesn't make sense to me. I challenge the "Nothing else was changed." Maybe not knowingly.
__________________
Bikes don't stand alone. They are two tired.
SJX426 is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 12:26 PM
  #5  
Grand Bois
Senior Member
 
Grand Bois's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Pinole, CA, USA
Posts: 17,392
Mentioned: 24 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 443 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 27 Times in 25 Posts
Originally Posted by kontact
what's an si?
+1
Grand Bois is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 12:37 PM
  #6  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
If you make the chain longer, you're going to have less A tension opposing B tension, so you may need to let some B tension off by backing off the B screw. But that's just on some derailleurs, not SRAM, for instance.
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 01:15 PM
  #7  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
Chain length can affect shifting and the big/BIG +2 method is not always optimal. Sometimes the shimano small/BIG vertical jockey wheels method works better.

Sorry to state the obvious but did you check your limit screws? I usually set these up first, as in the old friction shift days. Pull on the cable manually to shift. Will it reach those cogs then?

I don't know what SI is either. Do you mean STI? Indexing?
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 03:02 PM
  #8  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
Originally Posted by Salamandrine
Chain length can affect shifting and the big/BIG +2 method is not always optimal. Sometimes the shimano small/BIG vertical jockey wheels method works better.

Sorry to state the obvious but did you check your limit screws? I usually set these up first, as in the old friction shift days. Pull on the cable manually to shift. Will it reach those cogs then?

I don't know what SI is either. Do you mean STI? Indexing?
Assuming a typical Shimano derailleur and small/small vs big/big chain lengths, what is going to cause the shifting quality to be affected by the angle and tension of the jockey pulley cage if the indexing, stops and B settings were made correctly?
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 10:35 PM
  #9  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
Originally Posted by Kontact
Assuming a typical Shimano derailleur and small/small vs big/big chain lengths, what is going to cause the shifting quality to be affected by the angle and tension of the jockey pulley cage if the indexing, stops and B settings were made correctly?
Chain length, even a link or two, will affect the wrap and the position of the jockey cage. It's kind of hard to describe, but a chain will often shift better with a link added or removed. There's always an optimum, despite the fact that often times a range of chain lengths will actually work. It's mostly in the smaller cogs in back that the differences are obvious.

AFA the why, I don't know and don't frankly care. There are a lot of aspects of bike mechanics where experience trumps theory. This is one.
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 10:43 PM
  #10  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
Originally Posted by Salamandrine
Chain length, even a link or two, will affect the wrap and the position of the jockey cage. It's kind of hard to describe, but a chain will often shift better with a link added or removed. There's always an optimum, despite the fact that often times a range of chain lengths will actually work. It's mostly in the smaller cogs in back that the differences are obvious.

AFA the why, I don't know and don't frankly care. There are a lot of aspects of bike mechanics where experience trumps theory. This is one.
I see no reason why you can't move the pulley to where you need it with the B screw.
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-18-18, 10:47 PM
  #11  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
You've got some adjustment with the B screw of course, but it isn't everything. Chain length matters more IME. I suppose we'll have to agree to disagree.
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 12:16 AM
  #12  
dddd
Ride, Wrench, Swap, Race
 
dddd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Northern California
Posts: 9,181

Bikes: Cheltenham-Pedersen racer, Boulder F/S Paris-Roubaix, Varsity racer, '52 Christophe, '62 Continental, '92 Merckx, '75 Limongi, '76 Presto, '72 Gitane SC, '71 Schwinn SS, etc.

Mentioned: 132 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1562 Post(s)
Liked 1,286 Times in 857 Posts
The SI is the most important parameter with modern drivetrains. It boggles my mind that people who would step into this discussion do not know what it means.
dddd is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 01:45 AM
  #13  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
Originally Posted by dddd
The SI is the most important parameter with modern drivetrains. It boggles my mind that people who would step into this discussion do not know what it means.
Clearly. It is nearly as critical as RL.
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 03:12 AM
  #14  
52telecaster
ambulatory senior
 
52telecaster's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2016
Location: Peoria Il
Posts: 5,998

Bikes: Austro Daimler modified by Gugie! Raleigh Professional and lots of other bikes.

Mentioned: 76 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1954 Post(s)
Liked 3,658 Times in 1,677 Posts
Originally Posted by Kontact
Clearly. It is nearly as critical as RL.
​​​​​​shift index?
52telecaster is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 05:18 AM
  #15  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
If you know what SI means, why not tell us? Not a common or C&V acronym.

I've adjusted many thousands of derailleurs and drivetrains without knowing, so apparently it's not as important as you think.
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 05:25 AM
  #16  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
My knowledge of BSA is clearly lacking. I'll need to take a TO from this BDT. CUL.
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 05:34 AM
  #17  
rm -rf
don't try this at home.
 
rm -rf's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: N. KY
Posts: 5,933
Mentioned: 10 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 972 Post(s)
Liked 509 Times in 349 Posts
Originally Posted by johnggold
I have been scratch building a road bike using a Trek compact frame,and mostly Shimano 105 components. Mostly I build older vintege bikes, so its not often I touch 10 speed gears.

Normally I measure new chain length using big to big +2 links, but I had read that for 10 speeds you should use small to small and thread the chain through the derailleur, so I used that method.

However, when I came to set up the SI, I could not get it to work. The derailleur did not seem to be indexing and would not reach the two largest cogs. I adjusted the angle in case the derailleur was hitting the cogs, I double checked parts numbers in case I had a non 10 speed, changed the outer cables, as I had been a bit tight - no change.

The only change I had made was to measure the chain. So I split the chain, re-measured my normal way and there was a 4 link difference (too long). I rechecked the new way, and I appeared tom have that correct. I had images to check against as well as instructions.

As soon as I shortened the chain, everything worked, but I cannot get my head around how this impacted on the SI. Nothing else was changed.

Can anyone provide an explanation.
Did you reconnect the chain with the special pin? You can't just push a pin back in, the "rivet" head is broken off. I always use quick links instead of the supplied pin.

That's interesting that the shifting was so bad and improved so much. I've never had that happen to me, and my previous bike came with a too-long chain.

(From the context: "SI" shift indexing? I've never heard that term...)
rm -rf is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 08:31 AM
  #18  
dddd
Ride, Wrench, Swap, Race
 
dddd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Northern California
Posts: 9,181

Bikes: Cheltenham-Pedersen racer, Boulder F/S Paris-Roubaix, Varsity racer, '52 Christophe, '62 Continental, '92 Merckx, '75 Limongi, '76 Presto, '72 Gitane SC, '71 Schwinn SS, etc.

Mentioned: 132 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1562 Post(s)
Liked 1,286 Times in 857 Posts
I commented on the SI term as a hoax to elicit some explanation from the OP, but thinking about it I may have been right.

I seem to recall from a seminar at Interbike many years ago an in-house quantitative term used to describe the performance of shifting performance/robustness that related to how much of an adjustment range would still give acceptable performance.

That term just may have been the "selectivity index".

But it seems that the OP is going to let us toss this one around for a while.
dddd is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 08:47 AM
  #19  
Salamandrine 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,280

Bikes: 78 Masi Criterium, 68 PX10, 2016 Mercian King of Mercia, Rivendell Clem Smith Jr

Mentioned: 120 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2317 Post(s)
Liked 597 Times in 430 Posts
Originally Posted by dddd
I commented on the SI term as a hoax to elicit some explanation from the OP, but thinking about it I may have been right.
Yeah, I realized the hoax after my first post. Hence the second less serious comment. I can be slow before coffee...

It seems the OP is referring to indexing, but we don't really know.

There have been a few silly in-house terms introduced at Interbike over the years. I still think Q factor is kind of dumb. Chosen cuz it sounds serious I guess. Q factor means something very specific in engineering/science, and it is not pedal to pedal width.
Salamandrine is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 09:10 AM
  #20  
JohnDThompson 
Old fart
 
JohnDThompson's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Appleton WI
Posts: 24,777

Bikes: Several, mostly not name brands.

Mentioned: 153 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3582 Post(s)
Liked 3,395 Times in 1,929 Posts
Originally Posted by dddd
The SI is the most important parameter with modern drivetrains. It boggles my mind that people who would step into this discussion do not know what it means.
Originally Posted by Kontact
Clearly. It is nearly as critical as RL.
And closely correlated with BS, one suspects.
JohnDThompson is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 09:12 AM
  #21  
ksryder
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 2014
Posts: 2,537

Bikes: yes

Mentioned: 18 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1281 Post(s)
Liked 643 Times in 329 Posts
It's a metaphor. How do the chains (of capitalism) affect the Solomon Islands (SI)? OP is trying to start a discussion regarding how the economic imperialism of western nations contributed to the widespread economic, political and social instability experienced by many former colonial possession upon gaining Independence, which is illustrated by the ethnic violence between the Guales and Malaitans in the late 1990s, and how modern day expansion of Chinese business interests continues to contribute to the instability in the region.

When OP refers to splitting the chain, and then shortening it, he is referring to the frequent need for deployment of Australian and New Zealand troops to the region to quell simmering ethnic tensions. Yes, it solves the immediate problem, but fails to address the underlying conditions leading to the problems in the first place.

ksryder is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 09:19 AM
  #22  
Road Fan
Senior Member
 
Road Fan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 16,866

Bikes: 1980 Masi, 1984 Mondonico, 1984 Trek 610, 1980 Woodrup Giro, 2005 Mondonico Futura Leggera ELOS, 1967 PX10E, 1971 Peugeot UO-8

Mentioned: 49 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1854 Post(s)
Liked 661 Times in 504 Posts
My state of bogglement remains unabated. But now I have an enlightened insight - it is just one of many forms of BS.
Road Fan is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 11:34 AM
  #23  
jimmuller 
What??? Only 2 wheels?
 
jimmuller's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Boston-ish, MA
Posts: 13,434

Bikes: 72 Peugeot UO-8, 82 Peugeot TH8, 87 Bianchi Brava, 76? Masi Grand Criterium, 74 Motobecane Champion Team, 86 & 77 Gazelle champion mondial, 81? Grandis, 82? Tommasini, 83 Peugeot PF10

Mentioned: 189 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1222 Post(s)
Liked 645 Times in 232 Posts
I'm starting wonder about the Tr0LL factor w.r.t. SI. And it isn't even April.

Originally Posted by rm -rf
Did you reconnect the chain with the special pin? You can't just push a pin back in, the "rivet" head is broken off.
In the old days before chain pins were supposedly peened we just pushed the pins back into place with ye ol' chain tool, and they worked just fine. I figure that if a pin has as much or more friction in the side plate now as it did then then it ought to work. My experience with new 8-spd chains like the SRAM PC870 and KMC (Is that what it is? I fergit 'xactly...) is that they do take a lot more force to push the pin out and a fair amount to push it back in too. So it should work as well or better than in the old days. So I've treated them the way I always did (which cussing at the extra effort it takes). The only time I've had a chain break was when a quick-link came apart.
__________________
Real cyclists use toe clips.
With great bikes comes great responsibility.
jimmuller
jimmuller is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 12:09 PM
  #24  
Kontact 
Senior Member
 
Kontact's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 6,958
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4340 Post(s)
Liked 1,526 Times in 995 Posts
Originally Posted by jimmuller
I'm starting wonder about the Tr0LL factor w.r.t. SI. And it isn't even April.



In the old days before chain pins were supposedly peened we just pushed the pins back into place with ye ol' chain tool, and they worked just fine. I figure that if a pin has as much or more friction in the side plate now as it did then then it ought to work. My experience with new 8-spd chains like the SRAM PC870 and KMC (Is that what it is? I fergit 'xactly...) is that they do take a lot more force to push the pin out and a fair amount to push it back in too. So it should work as well or better than in the old days. So I've treated them the way I always did (which cussing at the extra effort it takes). The only time I've had a chain break was when a quick-link came apart.
Considering that the side plates have gotten thinner to make the chains narrow, I suspect narrow chains have much less friction between the side plate and pin than they did on 7 speed chains.
Kontact is offline  
Old 06-19-18, 12:46 PM
  #25  
masi61
Senior Member
 
masi61's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: SW Ohio
Posts: 3,681

Bikes: Puch Marco Polo, Saint Tropez, Masi Gran Criterium

Mentioned: 25 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1163 Post(s)
Liked 441 Times in 314 Posts
In my business “SI” is an acronym for “suicidal ideation” - we use it all the time. I wonder if the OP was talking about “STI” or “Shimano Total Integration”. Shimano STI is so dominant in the market that the acronym STI is something I understand, “SI” not so much.
masi61 is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.