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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 93
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I need a lower gear than he 17.6-gear inch I now have (24 sprockets front divided by 34 rear). Some one told me that I could get an even bigger gear for the cassette. But it may be easier to get a 22-sprocket chain ring for my 5-hole 74mm bolt circle road crank? I don’t want to use a Mt. Tamer adapter unless that’s the only way.
Does any one know where I can get these?
__________________
All the commuter cycling info that I know is here: http://actionbent.blogspot.com/ Every thing from building a bike to what it takes to keep it on the road. |
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#2 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 828
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Quote:
Afaik, 34t rear is the biggest but 22t front is available. |
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#3 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 2,012
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Quote:
In general, if you/(anyone) really need(s)/want(s) a lower gear, then if the bike has a 700c wheels, switch to a 26" rear wheel ... BUT, you'll probably be going so slowly that I'm not sure that dismounting & walking-or-runnng-with-the-bike wouldn't be a better/faster option ... N.B., if you opt for the 22t, get a "dog fang"/whatever if you don't have one because you're going to be really unhappy if the chain drops off the granny when you're going that slowly ... If your bike has a 27" rear wheel, switch to a 700c or 26" wheel -- a 700x32 tire has about the same circumference as a 27.25x1.25 tire, so switching to a 700c rim may not be beneficial for someone using 27" wheels. If your bike has a 26" rear wheel, fit a 24" or possibly a 650c wheel ... AND/OR, get some 180mm cranks. BTW. I seem to recall that there used to be an adapter (which you could make if you're really handy) which would allow you to mount a chainring as one of the cogs in a cassette! You may-or-may-not have a problem getting the derailleur to shift onto the larger "cog" you've created ... If your bike isn't a 29er & has "regular" road calipers, then you can probably get the additional reach by installing a BMX brake caliper in the rear -- BMX calipers generally have about a 90mm reach -- if a "long" reach caliper isn't long enough. |
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#4 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Sweden
Posts: 849
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Quote:
The site he's referring to (http://actionbent.blogspot.com/ )might provide a clue... 'bents tend to run wider ranges. Quote:
Never seen that. OTOH there are adapters that'll turn a front triple into a quad, using a sprocket as a chainwheel. Unfortunately for the OP, that'st probably the "Mt. Tamer" he don't want to use. |
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