Then you should call it the v2.1 or some other name to indicate that it has changed.Gromit wrote: A bit more info about your bike might be helpful perhaps.
Freerider yes? V1 or V2? Early V2? Hence a single chainwheel right? The latest ones have a double chainwheel.
You tell me. I bought it last spring in April. I dont know what parts is on it, i tried looking it up at the website, but no dice, no information.Quote: Is there a maker's name and model on the cranks?
You have fitted a Rohloff, haven't you? So I guess that it is a bigger single chainwheel that you need?
I could, but i heard that if the cog is too small, it is worn down more easily.Quote: As an alternative, could you fit a smaller cog onto the Rohloff instead?
As you know. Small changes at the Rohloff sprocket are equivalent to much larger changes at the chainwheel.JonB wrote:Then you should call it the v2.1 or some other name to indicate that it has changed.Gromit wrote: A bit more info about your bike might be helpful perhaps.
Freerider yes? V1 or V2? Early V2? Hence a single chainwheel right? The latest ones have a double chainwheel.
You tell me. I bought it last spring in April. I dont know what parts is on it, i tried looking it up at the website, but no dice, no information.Quote: Is there a maker's name and model on the cranks?
You have fitted a Rohloff, haven't you? So I guess that it is a bigger single chainwheel that you need?
And yes, it is a bigger single chainwheel
I could, but i heard that if the cog is too small, it is worn down more easily.Quote: As an alternative, could you fit a smaller cog onto the Rohloff instead?
I have done calculations and i want something like 48, maybe 46 is enough, but for now, 48. And i have the 44? it came with.Gromit wrote:As you know. Small changes at the Rohloff sprocket are equivalent to much larger changes at the chainwheel.JonB wrote: I could, but i heard that if the cog is too small, it is worn down more easily.
How many teeth has your existing hub gear sprocket? How many teeth would you need to have to achieve your ideal set of gear ratios?
I'm sure that you've already done the calculations. I've always found this gear calculator helpful myself because it has a setting for the Rohloff or other hub gears such as the Shimano Nexus 8.
http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/internal.html
I will take a picture and post it, then you can tell me.Hardtailcruzer wrote: Hi Jon,
If you're using the original V1 crankset, you'll need to get crank arms and a chain ring because the V1 chainring is riveted to the crank spider.
I think that maybe the apprentice measured the wrong size? or they forgot to times the measurement with 1.7 (five arms) or maybe they used 1.4, they could just be too busy with other customers that actually buy bikes from them, and not just repair service?Hardtailcruzer wrote: The 48t chainring is very common and I'm surprised it's difficult to find. It is frquently used on "trekking" bikes and is a popular choice for single speed bikes as a single ring.
Why does the page Freerider V2 specs still speak about 8 speed bikes?Gromit wrote: A bit more info about your bike might be helpful perhaps.
Freerider yes? V1 or V2? Early V2? Hence a single chainwheel right? The latest ones have a double chainwheel.
doesnt it come with 8 speeds?Sylvain wrote:Why does the page Freerider V2 specs still speak about 8 speed bikes?Gromit wrote: A bit more info about your bike might be helpful perhaps.
Freerider yes? V1 or V2? Early V2? Hence a single chainwheel right? The latest ones have a double chainwheel.
Doesn't double chainwheel mean twice as many speeds?JonB wrote: doesnt it come with 8 speeds?
Sylvain wrote:Doesn't double chainwheel mean twice as many speeds?JonB wrote: doesnt it come with 8 speeds?