Cycletreads. Last time it was $180 for a new chain and two sprockets, fitted, as I recall.
I beleive it has something to do with tension on the output shaft of the motor into the gear box but i could well be wrong. Trust me it will make a massive difference. You can fashion the tool for the swingarm adjuster out of a thickish piece of metal, a hacksaw and a grinder. It takes about 40 mins (its not pretty but it works). Only problem is if someone has had a hack at the cam adjuster with a screw driver and been a savage bastard. Then they can be difficult to move (but not impossible)
You may wish to change to a 520 sprocket as 525 chains are hardish to find (except the super expensive ones) and gives u a greater variety of sprocket sizes. you can fit the sprocket and chain easy as. But if the shop wants to do it let'em. Make sure the chain is strong enough (i.e. heavy duty) for your bike.
It sounds pretty easy to replace chain and sprockets, but yeah your paying like 10 bucks more for fitting so may as well get them to do it.
I saw DID 525 chain with sprocket on trademe but for 10 more i think ill just go to the shop.
just remember the duty of the chain. a medium duty (i think thats what its called) wont last very long at all on one of these.
sweet ok ill pop down to cycle treads and get it all done.
what sprocket do you reccommend me telling them to fit? Something a little shorter/harder acceleration would be cool since this thing does over 100kph is first gear.
it does a 100kph in first gear cause it has a racing gearbox. If you gear it down for more acceleration then it will pull a bit better in 1st but all the other gears will prob be annoyingly short. i'd put whats recommended on it and see what you think then fiddle with it. But if your gonna change sprocket sizes switch to a 520 setup, as there is a much greater variety in sizes.
There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop
Thanks all. Got the chain adjusted and WD40'd it and gave it a good scrub- then lubed it up later with chain lube. Lots of crap came off of the chain. It does not reach the red ''replace chain mark'' yet though so all good I reckon.. for a while.
sounds like a reasonable explanation
tight spots = new chain
i've had a chain come off and lock rear wheel, leaving a nice 30m black mark on the road
also had one come off and launch itself through the crank casing. on the way to trade it in:slap:
seen the damage a snapped 520 chain can do to a quad bike. rotted the chain keeper and broke all the casing where the keeper bolted on. your road bike likely won't have a keeper, so expect a serious oil leak
i use a soft 4mm aluminium rod and rubber mallet. this way doesn't damage the bike, but having the tool is always the better option.
a bike shop
remember like most things spending more now saves you later. had a $60 chain that needed weekly tighening and rooted my sprockets in just a few months. replaced with over $200 worth of X-ring glory and since bedding in i've tightened it thrice in 12 months of daily abuse
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