![bike chain too long high speed bike chain too long high speed](https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Wjy2kZDer8J93dBuNVHuw4-1200-80.jpg)
If you are replacing just the chain (and not the sprockets or chainset) here is a tip for getting the chain length correct. You probably only get one of these with a new chain, so it is important to get the length right on the first try. The narrowest chains, used with cassettes that have 10 sprockets - sometimes 9 - must be joined using special one-time-use replacement pins or master links. Making the chain too short, then lengthening it is a time-waster.
![bike chain too long high speed bike chain too long high speed](https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/skVoNnK8iru72WUmUFkoT3.jpg)
Work by shortening the chain, rather than lengthening it. Turning the crank by hand, check that the chain will shift to the large-large combination using the front derailer or rear derailer, or both at once, without binding. Then thread the chain through the rear derailer and connect it. Start with the shortest chain that would permit connection, allowing one extra complete link as shown in the photo at the left above, so the bottom of the chain droops if you align it as in the picture at the right. In almost all cases, this will give the optimum length. Mesh the two ends on to the large chainwheel so that one complete link (one inch, - one inner and one outer half-link) overlaps. The best technique for setting chain length is to thread the chain onto the large/large combination, without running it through the rear derailer. So not being able to use the small-small combo because of slack chain should not normally be a problem.Īs always, Sheldon Brown has the authoritative explanation: This causes extra friction and chain wear, and (almost always) those gears are duplicated elsewhere so there's no need to use them. In cross-over gears are the large-large and small-small ones, so called because the chain crosses over from one side of the crankset to the opposite side of the cassette. This ties into the "some gears man was not meant to use" discussion. But as long as you can get into the gear you won't break anything (you just need to add a link back in, and maybe pull the wheel out to release the tension). Remember you do need a little slack so you can get out of the gear - you're using the return spring in the rear derailleur to pull the chain off the biggest cog, and if there's too much chain tension it won't be able to do that.
![bike chain too long high speed bike chain too long high speed](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61h90AZeGZL._AC_SY879_.jpg)
Keep extending the Z until the rear derailleur seems unhappy, counting links.
![bike chain too long high speed bike chain too long high speed](https://www.parktool.com/assets/img/repairhelp/_1200x630_crop_center-center_82_none/chain_replace_002.jpg)
If you can do that there are extra links. Try pulling a link over itself so there's a wee Z formed in the chain. What I suggest is shifting into the large-large combo and see if there is spare chain. This breakage often throws the derailleur into your rear wheel which both breaks spokes and can dump you on the ground. But also to snap the rear derailleur if it can't accomodate the position required, and if you're especially unlucky you might snap off the derailleur hanger as well. Hard enough to snap the chain in some cases. Since you're going into a lower gear at that point, it often happens when you're pedalling hard. Trying to shift into the large-large gear when there's not enough chain will stop your pedals, so there's a lot of force involved. Too much chain is kind of annoying, but too little can break things. Park have an exhaustive explanation of various methods. If there's just barely enough chain for that everything will work, although the small-small combo may have a lot of slack. My preferred method of finding chain length is to focus on the largest chainring-largest cog combination. In the large chainring-large cog photo it looks as though the derailleur arm could be pulled forward at least one chain link, possibly two. Edit: from your photos, yes, the chain is too long.