1x chainring recomm...
 

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[Closed] 1x chainring recommendations for 26er

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I'm currently running 30t chain rings on my 29ers (36t lowest on cassette), which is about the lowest my 53 year old legs can now manage off-road. I've picked up a nice 26er frame cheap and would like to build it up with 1x10, and I'm trying to get a similar feeling gear range as my 29er. My guesstimate is that a 34t chainring will give me a similar low gear on a 36 cassette(?)

Does anyone have experience of this 29/26 1x set-up - if so, could you share your thoughts please.

TIA


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 5:25 pm
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Personally I couldn't manage bigger than 32t when I was 1x10 on 26in.

Quite hilly riding here, might've managed a 34t for the shorter climbs back down south.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 5:30 pm
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You can work out the ratios, but I've ended up on 32- I could make 34 work but i didn't feel it was a very good tradeoff, I very rarely feel like I need a higher gear than 32-11


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 5:36 pm
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Ah, that's good to know! (Ta). We're in the Dark Peak, so not proper mountainous, but climbs are tough enough for me - whereabouts are you?


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 5:39 pm
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Use Sheldon Brown's gear calculator both for your existing setup, a 3x10 for the 26" and a 1x10 for the 26" then you'll get a feel for where the range should lie. You could always swap out one of the cogs for an extender - might look a bit odd on a 26" wheel though!


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 5:43 pm
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I'm in Hebden and 32t on a 1x10 is enough for my legs


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 6:19 pm
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Rivington is my local riding.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 6:38 pm
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I'm on 32t at the front, AND i have a dinner plate (42t) at the back!

#skinnylegs


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 6:41 pm
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I looked at the range of gears I had and which I used then went for a 32. I could probably get away with a 34 but decided to keep a nice easy gear for when I'm tired or lazy.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 7:04 pm
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Thanks for all the feedback. It sounds like a 32t is the way to go - then if
my knackered knee/back/shoulder and weedy legs find it too much I'll bung one of those 40t cogs into the cassette.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 7:35 pm
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You could do something radical like divide 29 by 26 and multiply it by 30!!!!!!!! 😯


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 7:40 pm
 nikk
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On my old 26er, I ran 1x9 32 for a while, then went to 1x10 32. They both seemed fine, with the extra 36 tooth rear on the 10 speed cassette a bonus.

On the 29er, I started with 32 tooth chainring, and found that a little hard work on long rides with challenging climbs. I switched down to a 28 tooth chainring, and that works fine, only complaint is I am in the 11 tooth small sprocket quite a lot, and tend to wear that side of the cassette out before the other cogs... but then running XT I can replace the 11, 13, and 15 cogs and all is well.

Gear calc says that 32 chainring on a 26er is equivalent to a 29 tooth chainring on a 29er. For narrow wide you can't get 29 tooth yet (:-) so 28 or 30 is the choice. I may try 30 at some point to see if I can shift a bit more into the middle of the cassette, but that 28-36 combo is just right for winchy stuff when tired (or unfit).

Spinning out isn't a concern if you are doing longer rides. If you do short sprinty type rides, go for bigger chainrings, but TBH if you are peddling a MTB at >20MPH for any length of time on the flat, give team Sky a phone the next TDF waits 🙂


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 7:59 pm
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30t with 11-40t cassette for me but I am a bit unfit fat knacker but prefer to ride uphills than walk as it hurts my knees less. 😆


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 8:03 pm
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I ride SS quite a lot, reasonably fit, on my Anthem 30T 11-36 suits me perfect.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 8:25 pm
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See how some (all?) the 30t rings have the thread machined in, so you only need half your chainring bolt. Will a steel bolt into an aluminium chainring lead to misery, or will a bit of anti-seize compound sort it?


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 10:25 pm
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They have the thread machined in on the 30t rings to fit a 104 bc because you need a spacer to stop the chain hitting the crank arms and this spacer is usually incorporated in the ring too. Anti seize would be a good idea.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 10:31 pm
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I assumed that was why, cheers.


 
Posted : 03/04/2015 10:34 pm

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