The correct length of your chain
Written by: Dan Empfield
Date: Tue Jul 22 2008
Imagine if a bike racer from the late 70s crashed and fell into a coma, only to awaken this year to find not 5, 6, 7, or even 8 gears on the backs of bikes, but 11! Well, 10, but if he stays asleep for a few more months, he'll wake up to 11.
This certainly seems like a lot of gears, it's true, but this has given us some opportunities. With today's 10-speed gearing, we can ride Shimano cassettes in the following configurations: 11-21; 11-23; 12-21; 12-23; 12-25; 12-27. That 12-21 is what we call a straight-block: all cogs are one tooth apart from the next in the series. A straight block is what you'd want on flat terrain.
On hilly terrain, though, you'd want some cogs with a lot of teeth. Perhaps you might choose that 12-25, or even the 12-27. What some have found maddening, though, is that Shimano does not make an 11-27. Why not, since you have 10 gears to work with, and since Shimano's standard-cage Dura Ace rear derailleur can handle a fairly wide range of total teeth? By "total teeth" I refer to the range dictated by the size of the rear derailleur's cage. That cage, which houses the higher and lower pullies, sucks up the excess chain when you're in gears featuring not very many teeth, for example, the small chainring in front and a smaller cog in back. Were you riding a 12-27 with a 53x39 crank, the total teeth represented there is 29 teeth, 15 in the rear plus 14 in the front. Shimano's derailleurs can easily handle 30 total teeth, and this assumes riding in the small ring and small cog, and/or the big ring and big cog, generally considered a no-no.
SRAM does make 11-tooth-to-granny gear 10-speed cassettes. It makes 11-26 and even 11-28. These slip right onto Shimano cassettes and work acceptably well on Shimano drivetrains. When would you want a cassette like this? Two possibilities. One is where you have both steep uphills and gentle descents. Wildflower Triathlon's long course is an example that comes to mind. More likely is when climbing power and lower gears is really a priority to you, and you've chosen compact gearing. Typical with a crank made in this style is to have chain rings featuring 50x36 teeth, or even 50x34.
If a 50-tooth chainring is what you've got as your outer, that 11- tooth cog may come in handy on those gently sloping descents. For this reason, depending on the course, either an 11-21 or an 11-26 might be in order, depending on the profile of the course.
In other words, yes, with 10 cogs on the back, the urgency to change cassettes per the race topography is not as great. But, racing triathlons in the aero position in a steep config does require riding that high cadence, so gearing is again thrust onto center stage.
In the case of the photo at the top of this article, you'll note that the lower pulley is sitting almost directly behind the upper. That's how your derailleur should look when your chain is in a gear using the fewest total teeth. On paper, the fewest number of teeth is achieved when your chain is on the smallest cog (an 11t or 12t cog), and the small (inner) chainring. But, as previously stated, that gear is not kosher to ride.
Shimano maintains you can ride its drivetrain in lo-lo or hi-hi. Nevertheless, in the case of the photo at the top of the article, the chain length is chosen with the chain sitting on the small ring and the second-to-smallest cog (I maintain lo-lo is still a no-no). You'll note there is some tension in the chain, and the chain must not rub on the upper pulley's chain guard. That's how you determine the chain's proper length, and it yields the longest chain available to you.
The photo just above shows that same chain coursing through the pulleys of a SRAM Red derailleur, with the chain on the 53-tooth chainring and on the third cog down from the top. This is an 11-26 freewheel, meaning that third cog down is a 21-tooth. The bike can customarily be ridden on the second cog from the top, which is a 23t, but as you can see the pulleys are on top of each other even with the bike in a 53x21. So, were this chain any shorter, you'd be hard pressed to efficiently ride this cassette on this bike with this chain.
This ability to move from a close-ratio cassette to one with a wide- ratio, without changing your chain, requires you mount your new chain using this method.
Updated from its original publication in 2004, this article is the answer to a Slowtwitch Forum user who once posted: "[Blank] the car, I'm putting a bike workshop in the garage." His post asked for advice, and this is it. 3.06.08
What follows herein is the bike tinkerer's list of essential tools. Any less and you're a caveman. All these specialty tools can be had for quite a small sum compared with the many thousands a pro shop will spend on its tools. 3.06.08
Comments
Chain length
Reviewed by: Andre, Aug 2 2008 7:37AM
Great article
Reviewed by: Neil Hammond [Gandalf], Jul 30 2008 7:46AM
Chain length
Reviewed by: Scott Colvin, Jul 25 2008 9:15AM
Dan's Chain Length Article
Oh... I get it!
Reviewed by: Mark Voss, Jul 25 2008 6:47AM
But Dan's article was an A-HA moment for me because of his ancillary description of straight-gearing cassette choices (made Zinn's Tri-bike book make sense). I'm now having an 11-23 installed for a pancake flat race course in Belgium.
Answering a very commong question
Reviewed by: Dennis, Jul 22 2008 9:54PM



