Author Topic: Derailleur and chain length  (Read 951 times)

jannmayer

Derailleur and chain length
« on: November 13, 2023, 11:12:20 PM »
I'm replacing the Shimano 105 derailleur on my road bike with a GRX. It's a 2x11 with 11-34 cassette. The GRX cage is longer than the 105 cage. Will I need a longer chain? The chain length calculators I've seen don't factor that in, but it seems like the chain would have a longer path with a longer cage...



Tijoe

Re: Derailleur and chain length
« Reply #1 on: November 13, 2023, 11:32:23 PM »
I see you use the same name in MTBR as on this forum.    Double questions, you should get a good answer on one of the forums.    Your MTBR  thread will probably have 50 responses by the end of the day tomorrow, and start drifing off-topic after the first 5 to 10 replies.  ;D

Regarding your question,  If I change components and put on a new chain, I often make the chain 2 or 3 links longer as a starting point.  Shift it through the gears and see how far the cage travels.  If it isn't tensioned as much as the old derailleur, I will remove a link until it shifts smoothly across the range of gears.  Remember to adjust the limit/tension screw first before removing any links.
« Last Edit: November 13, 2023, 11:34:22 PM by Tijoe »

jannmayer

Re: Derailleur and chain length
« Reply #2 on: November 14, 2023, 01:02:26 AM »
Yes, I figure I'm 25% more likely to get a good answer if I post in two places!


I will start with a few extra links. The GRX derailleur should be able to take up a lot of slack, so it might not be too critical (I'm running a 2x11 with an 11-46 cassette on my gravel bike, same rear derailleur.)

jonathanf2

Re: Derailleur and chain length
« Reply #3 on: November 14, 2023, 12:15:29 PM »
I just recently swapped a long cage GRX400 RD for a mid-cage Ultegra RX800 rear derailleur on my gravel bike. No need to change chain length as long cassette and chainrings are the same.