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Thread: Adjusting the top chain span

  1. #1
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    Adjusting the top chain span

    I have just read an article on the "thumpertalk.com' website. The writer advocates adjusting the chain slack on the top span. It is a Yamaha 450, he refers to.

    Is this a common way of adjusting off road chains? Does anyone adjust their road bike chains using the top run? I have never seen any owners manual showing the freeplay set on the top,

    In a sense, I can see some logic in this, as the top of the chain is the length being loaded with the engine power.
    " Rule books are for the Guidance of the Wise, and the Obedience of Fools"

  2. #2
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    13th February 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by awa355 View Post
    I have just read an article on the "thumpertalk.com' website. The writer advocates adjusting the chain slack on the top span. It is a Yamaha 450, he refers to.

    Is this a common way of adjusting off road chains? Does anyone adjust their road bike chains using the top run? I have never seen any owners manual showing the freeplay set on the top,

    In a sense, I can see some logic in this, as the top of the chain is the length being loaded with the engine power.

    Ummmmmmmm, if you adjust the top span slack, it just goes tight the moment any torque is applied to it, and thereby further slackening the bottom span.
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  3. #3
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    19th January 2006 - 19:13
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    Cant say i have,nor thought about doing so.
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  4. #4
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    25th April 2009 - 17:38
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    perhaps the top slider lifts the chain a bit when suspension is uncompressed, making adjustment less accurate from the bottom, adjusting from the top means the chain isn't on the slider? or maybe it rests on the bottom roller when slack, making it difficult to get accurate when adjusting from the bottom?
    "A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal

  5. #5
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    There's no benefit and it's a lot more difficult on a road bike given top of the chain is usually covered by the guard. The visually measurable difference is negligible. Access isn't as good.
    If it wasn't for a concise set of rules, we might have to resort to common sense!

  6. #6
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    25th March 2004 - 17:22
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    many dirtbikes have spring loaded tensioner rollers on the bottom, just pull them back & check.
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