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9 comments
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Had a further play today and ended up taking the mech off... how does it look? Is it damaged - I might just end up buying a new one anyway, getting a bit frustrated now![indecision indecision](/sites/all/themes/rcc/images/smilies/20.gif)
Right, well... I thought I was doing really well - aligned the mech, chain on the small ring and top sprocket at the back and going down through the gear it felt pretty good, a tiny bit of rub on the smallest sprocket but that could have been adjusted out right?
Anyway, my main problem came when I tried the top chainring, the chain pulled right off over the edge! I understand that's down to the limit adjuster on the outside. I've ran out of time tonight but how do I revert the mech right back to 'factory' settings? - that's the techy in my talking![yes yes](/sites/all/themes/rcc/images/smilies/4.gif)
I'm still not 100% I'm starting with an aligned mech; should I be starting with it 1-3mm above the large chainring's highest teeth and parallel with ring itself? I can't find any obvious pics for pointers?
There's no need. Shift into the smallest sprocket at the back, pick your chain back up onto the large chainring, then adjust the front derailleur's high limit screw until the cage just clears the outside of the chain. That'll get you into the right ballpark. Check that you can still change from small to big chainring; if not, back the limit screw off until you can.
Campag make a useful little plastic tool (UT-FD120) to help with lining up the cage with the cogs. There's no reason it wouldn't work with Shimano:
http://www.comtat.co.uk/products/836.htm?gclid=CMuE4pDomMwCFbgy0wodFOsBcw
The packet contains two, one for 53t and another for 50t. Really useful.
Seconded. The UT-FD120 is probably the biggest time-saver in my toolbox and has been used to greatly ease set up of both Campag and Shimano FDs.
Thanks for the replies people! Speaking to a couple of novices at work today they've also pointed out that it is worth making sure your rear mech is indexing correctly first before playing with the front... I'm off to have a play now!
And yes, I'm Shimano all round.
For a SRAM Yaw FD the main difference is you don't want to set the FD parallel to the big chainring. Instead, there are marks on the top of the FD cage. You want to line up these marks parallel to the big chainring instead.
The effect of doing this is, the FD cage will effectively have a few degrees of "yaw" with respect to the big ring. In other words, it'll be toed in.
GCN have a better explanation with a separate video dedicated for Yaw FDs.
There are lots of videos on YouTube for reference, but I'll walk you through the steps of adjusting a front derailleur from scratch here. I'm assuming you have a Shimano front derailleur.
SRAM's Yaw FDs have a slightly different setup, particularly regarding the angle of the FD cage.
After that, you're done. On my bike at least, after these adjustment steps, the trim function should already work properly.
You won't be the first person to do that!
If you read up on how to replace all gear cables that will be what you are essentially trying to do, it's time consuming (or was for me!) but once you understand how things work you'll be in a good place going forward. I don't appear to have bookmarked any useful links I'm afraid.