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  #1  
Old 01-10-2019, 05:00 PM
owly owly is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kirk007 View Post
The new Easton cranks have 46-30, 47-33, 50-34, 52-36, 52-39 - chainring combos all of which are interchangeable on the same crankarm and with multiple bb options. Crazy light to boot

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I'm doing a 10 speed 2x using the Easton EC90SL crank arms and spindle, with the Race Face 2x 'cinch' spider (104/64) using a 42/27 and 11-28.

Last edited by owly; 01-10-2019 at 05:01 PM. Reason: txt
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  #2  
Old 01-10-2019, 05:57 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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Cool!
What is the q factor of that set-up?
Whose chainrings?
Is 11 speed possible with this set-up?

Quote:
Originally Posted by owly View Post
I'm doing a 10 speed 2x using the Easton EC90SL crank arms and spindle, with the Race Face 2x 'cinch' spider (104/64) using a 42/27 and 11-28.
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  #3  
Old 01-10-2019, 05:58 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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What a load of experience and knowledge! Thanks folks - trying to digest it all!
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  #4  
Old 01-11-2019, 12:43 AM
owly owly is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NHAero View Post
Cool!
What is the q factor of that set-up?
Whose chainrings?
Is 11 speed possible with this set-up?
149mm q-factor.

Rings: any to suit bcd, I suppose. At the moment looking at a few options on the r2-bike site.

11speed?
http://imageshack.com/i/plsOlSw2p
^ SpeedyChix setup with 38/28. Can't quite make out from the pic if 11speed rings.
Edit #2:- 10speed rings in that pic. However the builder thinks they also did the same on another bike with 11speed rings.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Edit: Ended up going with 10/11sp Chinook rings in 40/26.
(Note: their new 42t ring has two options for spider-tab-width).
Easton EC90SL crank with RaceFace 2x(10sp) spider.

I prefer Wolftooth chainring bolts as they have hex fittings on both ends.
The flat head/end of a set sits down nice and flush with the countersunk bolt holes on the inner side of the rings.

Last edited by owly; 03-20-2019 at 05:03 PM. Reason: txt
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  #5  
Old 01-14-2019, 01:18 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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Trying to put all this info together:
- On 135 and 142 OLD hubs, an 11s cassette has a 44mm chainline
- Looking at the SRAM Frame Fit PDF pointed to by Mark McM, Sram Red and Force road cranks have a chainline about 45mm (diagram is dimensioned to the inner face of the chainrings so I added 1 mm).
- Changing these cranks to a 120/80mm spider allows mounting of a 42T/28T pair that is a stock combo on SRAM 2x10 (either from SRAM or aftermarket)
- If current Shimano road double cranksets also have a +/-45mm chainline, it's possible that the Ultegra 11s front derailleur and Shimano 11s shifter (RS685, R8000, etc.) can shift this chainring set-up, which has a 14T differential, since Shimano makes the Ultegra crankset in 50-34, 52-36, 53-39, and 46-36, a range of 10T to 16T differential. The chain guide shape may not be optimal for the small diameter 42T chainring, and the bottom of the chain guide may hit the top of the chainstay.
- Getting the SRAM crankset with a GXP BB allows it to be fit to a 68mm BSA BB shell.

Did I get this right?
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  #6  
Old 01-14-2019, 01:31 PM
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jtbadge jtbadge is offline
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With a T47 shell, you would also be able to run a BB30/PF30 SRAM crank.

The Shimano FD should work with that chainring gap - if you can mount it low enough to align properly above the big chainring.
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  #7  
Old 01-14-2019, 01:37 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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Thank you. I'm generalizing the question/solution to other, older bikes. One of the main reason I have been looking at the Hakka MX is my frustration with my efforts to get the low gearing I want on the BSA BB bikes I own, both of which has threaded 68mm BB shells. The SRAM cranks come in the GXP variation and with 30mm spindles so it seems generalizable across multiple platforms, and indeed Mark's example of his own bike was GXP.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jtbadge View Post
With a T47 shell, you would also be able to run a BB30/PF30 SRAM crank.

The Shimano FD should work with that chainring gap - if you can mount it low enough to align properly above the big chainring.
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  #8  
Old 01-14-2019, 01:53 PM
Mark McM Mark McM is offline
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A few notes:

It should be noted while generally all the Force 22 cranksets have removable spiders, not all the Red cranksets do. In particular, the Red Exogram cranksets have one piece crankarm-spiders.

If your frame uses a braze-on front derailleur, you may not be able to get the derailleur low enough to shift a 42-28. However, you might be able to get the derailleur lower with a WickWerks Fit-Link, which allows the front derailleur to be mounted up to 2 cm lower.

Depending on derailleur shape, you may have an issue with clearance between crankarm inner face and the derailleur cage out plate. Because the crank arm is angled outward from spindle to pedal, there is less clearance between chainrings and crank arm as the chainrings get smaller. Both chainrings are mounted to the inner face of the 120/80 crank spider, so you may get more room by installing chainring spacers, to offset the chainrings inward. This will also have the affect of reducing the chainline offset. The outer 120 mm BCD chainrings are held by bolts that thread directly into the chainring, so you may need longer bolts to accommodate the thickness of the chainring spacers. Longer 120mm BCD bolts are also available from WickWerks.

Since this gets into the territory beyond which the crank/derailleur was originally designed to work, the results may or may not be satisfactory. I've gotten a Campagnolo shifter/derailleur to work adequately with a 44-29 crankset, but I've never tried the combination you're suggesting. My experience with 42 and 38 outer chainrings has thus far only been on the stand in the work shop. It seemed to work, but I haven't tried shifting under load yet.

Last edited by Mark McM; 01-14-2019 at 01:58 PM.
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  #9  
Old 01-14-2019, 02:11 PM
Mark McM Mark McM is offline
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I just had another thought, about dimensions you might want to verify: The inner chainrings on a road double often come very close to overlapping the BB shell. With standard road BCDs (110mm, 130mm), there's plenty of space for the chainring to overlap the BB shell and external bearing cups. But with a 80mm BCD chainring, how space is there with the outer diameter of a T47 BB shell and bearing cup? With a 64mm BCD chainring, it might very well be a no-go (I've only tried a 64mm BCD chainring with a standard 68x1.370 ISO BB shell).

What's the actual outer diameter of a T47 BB shell, and what's the offset of the outer face of the BB cup?
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  #10  
Old 01-14-2019, 07:36 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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I don't know all the answers to your good questions. Ibis publishes a short guide to the Hakka MX that tells which T47 BB goes with which crankset:

https://s3.amazonaws.com/ibiscycles....ka_T47_BBs.pdf

Some require "innies" and some work with external cups.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark McM View Post
I just had another thought, about dimensions you might want to verify: The inner chainrings on a road double often come very close to overlapping the BB shell. With standard road BCDs (110mm, 130mm), there's plenty of space for the chainring to overlap the BB shell and external bearing cups. But with a 80mm BCD chainring, how space is there with the outer diameter of a T47 BB shell and bearing cup? With a 64mm BCD chainring, it might very well be a no-go (I've only tried a 64mm BCD chainring with a standard 68x1.370 ISO BB shell).

What's the actual outer diameter of a T47 BB shell, and what's the offset of the outer face of the BB cup?
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  #11  
Old 01-14-2019, 02:19 PM
NHAero NHAero is offline
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Thanks so much, Mark, much appreciated.
Because my Anderson frame has a braze-on tab, I own the Wickwerks Fit-Link. There's a 44T ring on there now, on the outer and middle positions of a Sugino AT triple, and the CX70 10s FD shifts it reasonably well even though it is mounted too high. The 44T is too large for the Fit-Link, but a 42T will allow its use.
I noticed the variation on the Red cranks, thank you.

At some point I know I have to bite the bullet and try this. The 20 year Litespeed I have uses a top pull clamp-on FD so I need to find info on cable pull on the Shimano 11s front shifter and its compatibility with various FDs on the market. Do you know where that cable pull info, for SRAM and Shimano, can be found? I can find it for RDs.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark McM View Post
A few notes:

It should be noted while generally all the Force 22 cranksets have removable spiders, not all the Red cranksets do. In particular, the Red Exogram cranksets have one piece crankarm-spiders.

If your frame uses a braze-on front derailleur, you may not be able to get the derailleur low enough to shift a 42-28. However, you might be able to get the derailleur lower with a WickWerks Fit-Link, which allows the front derailleur to be mounted up to 2 cm lower.

Depending on derailleur shape, you may have an issue with clearance between crankarm inner face and the derailleur cage out plate. Because the crank arm is angled outward from spindle to pedal, there is less clearance between chainrings and crank arm as the chainrings get smaller. Both chainrings are mounted to the inner face of the 120/80 crank spider, so you may get more room by installing chainring spacers, to offset the chainrings inward. This will also have the affect of reducing the chainline offset. The outer 120 mm BCD chainrings are held by bolts that thread directly into the chainring, so you may need longer bolts to accommodate the thickness of the chainring spacers. Longer 120mm BCD bolts are also available from WickWerks.

Since this gets into the territory beyond which the crank/derailleur was originally designed to work, the results may or may not be satisfactory. I've gotten a Campagnolo shifter/derailleur to work adequately with a 44-29 crankset, but I've never tried the combination you're suggesting. My experience with 42 and 38 outer chainrings has thus far only been on the stand in the work shop. It seemed to work, but I haven't tried shifting under load yet.
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  #12  
Old 01-10-2019, 06:36 PM
d_douglas d_douglas is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by owly View Post
I'm doing a 10 speed 2x using the Easton EC90SL crank arms and spindle, with the Race Face 2x 'cinch' spider (104/64) using a 42/27 and 11-28.
So, to my earlier question, would this setup work on an 11spd drivetrain?
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