More SRAM Yaw stuff, aka The Devil Is In The Details For Sure (warning--this is a wordy and boring read but this works, this is THE SECRET)
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After developing a creak in the front of the V which turned out to be the headset--the bolt that goes into the star nut had gotten a little loose--and fixing it, now creak free, yippee--when i got it all back together, naturally the Front D shifting was off. Way off. So I set out to readjust. And kept getting either chain rub in small ring/big cog, or if I eliminated that, it wouldn't shift to the big ring. Several complete re-do's later, using several 'methods' including resetting to the factory settings, yada yada yada, still the same problems. I was thinking that getting it to work right when building up the V to start with had been pure, irreproducible luck. SRAM 1x was starting to look
very attractive.
So after a nice ride this evening in which I just stayed out of the small ring, it was out to the garage after supper to try yet again. I reverted to the Art's Cyclery video, keeping in mind all the 'pearls' from other videos, websites, and of course this forum. Still no good. Finally I tried one last thing, differently than I had done thus far, and bazingo! Perfect shifting, total cross-chaining both ways with no rub, etc. Happy, happy, happy. Found the secret.
After setting derailleur height, shifting the chain to the big ring using the inner limit screw, lining up the marks on the D with the big ring, setting the outer limit screw, then it was time to reattach the cable to the D with the shifter shifted to the big ring position. As per all the written and video instructions, I had always just pulled the cable as tight as I could by hand, or sometimes with pliers, before anchoring it down. This always left the cable too slack to shift back up to the big ring after downshifting to the small. The remedy in all instructions was to go back to the small ring and re-tighten the cable there. This move always led to the rubbing in small-big mentioned above, or if the inner limit screw was backed off enough to eliminate that rub, it led to being unable to shift to the big ring.
So, in a move of pure luck, instead of hand or plier tightening the cable, I used the Park Tool 'Fourth Hand Cable Puller' to pull the cable pretty darn tight (but not tight enough to make the derailleur start to move/shift) at the point when the chain was still on the big ring, w the shifter in the high gear position, and then anchored it down. Then shifted down to the small ring, set the inner limit screw to eliminate rubbing, and when I tried to shift to the big ring.....it shifted perfectly! And did it from every cog, and shifted back to the small ring, all the way to small-big, with no rubbing. And back again. And again. Better than ever. Just like Daniel's bike from the Art's Cyclery video.
So that's the secret. Not mentioned in any set of instructions nor in any video. Now you know.
But SRAM 1x still looks pretty good. If they make an etap compatible with the bigger cogs, so one could use etap with 1x, and maybe a 48 or 50 tooth Q Ring up front......Sorry, just daydreaming now