anyone know about single speed conversion?

anyone know about single speed conversion?

Author
Discussion

The Londoner

Original Poster:

3,959 posts

239 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
I've got an old Trek road bike with downtube shifter, vertical dropouts etc that has been superceded in my fleet and not ridden anymore, so I'd like to turn it into a single speed bike. It's not something that I want to throw a lot of money at though, in terms of a new hub, wheel rebuilding etc. I found this: www.on-one.co.uk/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=74&MMN_position=187:187 which could be used in conjunction with a chain tensioner but the problem is this is only for 8 and 9 speed cassettes, and the Trek is 7 speed. Does anyone know of anything similar that I could use?

Parrot of Doom

23,075 posts

235 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
Buy it and get a hacksaw to cut the spacers down.

rico

7,916 posts

256 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
Parrot of Doom said:
Buy it and get a hacksaw to cut the spacers down.


yes

Before you do cut it up, have a look at the chainline to decide which side to chop the excess off. Nice straight chainline is what you want

The Londoner

Original Poster:

3,959 posts

239 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
Ah, the science that shall be known as "bodge"! hehe Think I'll have to pay a visit to my local machine shop; I'm not known for an ability to hacksaw anything straight!

rico

7,916 posts

256 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
The Londoner said:
Ah, the science that shall be known as "bodge"! hehe


Every part of mountain biking is bodged. Just bought a £100 E-Thirteen chain device and the amount of bodging needed to get these things to work is nuts!

Enjoy

vrooom

3,763 posts

268 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
I did this. I used loads of thin spacer that goes on hub, after i removed the gear cog out, and disassemled it selected the gear ratio. its work beauifully.

busta

4,504 posts

234 months

Tuesday 29th August 2006
quotequote all
Yeah,like vroom says. For my first bike I disassembled 2 old casettes and used all the spacers and the 15tooth sprocket (15-18teeth is about the normal single speed range). I had to play about a bit to get the correct chainline but then it was all fine and dandy.

The other problem is chain tensioning. If your lucky you might be able to find a sprocket and chainring combination that runs adequately tight with your vertical dropouts but this isnt easy. there is a site somewhere on the web where you can enter your chainstay length and it will give you gearing combinations that will work without a tensioner. If that doesnt work DMR and ON-ONE are the best people to go to for singlespeed tensioners. I have tried many different types of tensioner in the past and the dropout mounted, single jockey wheel type seem to be the simplest and most reliable.

However the option i eventually took was to cut off the dropouts and weld on some horizontal ones (see the pictures in the 'show your bike off' thread). It wasnt easy getting the alignment correct but if you have the tools and are a (or know of a) reasonably competent welder its a pretty quick job and will save you lots of hassle with tensioners (assuming your frame is steel that is).

Hope that helps.

Bernie


Edited by busta on Tuesday 29th August 20:15

fixedwheelnut

743 posts

233 months

Wednesday 30th August 2006
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For a single speed you can still use a chain tensioner but if you want to go fixed you will need a magic gear to get the correct chain tension, follow the link for an on-line gear calculator;
[url]http://eehouse.org/fixin/fixmeup.php[/url]