Tips To Understanding The Basics Of Mountain Bike Gear And How They Work
Why all these bike gear? To make riding faster and easier, of course. Whatever the number of gears your bike has, if it has 2 or more then there's a basic set-up which almost every bike employs.
First of all you have your front and rear sprockets. These, along with the chain, form the most basic components of the gearing system. To determine your gear ratio you compare the number of teeth on the front sprocket to the number of teeth on the rear sprocket.
If your front sprocket has 52 teeth, and your rear sprocket has 20 teeth, then you're looking at a ratio of 2.6. The higher the ratio the faster the gear. Typically the gears on the front, starting from the inside, get larger as you move out. On the back wheel, though, the largest bike gear is typically the farthest inside and they get smaller as you move out.
The next key component for your mountain bikes gears is the derailleur, or derailer. The derailleur is what moves the bicycle chain from gear to gear. A typical shifting system employs both a front and rear derailleur. Without the derailleur you wouldn't be able to shift gears. The derailleur consists of pulleys and the cage, which is the part which actually comes into contact with the chain. The pulleys are attached to the gear cables. There are separate cables for the front and rear derailleurs. The gear cables connect to the gear shifters.
There are a variety of gear shifters available today and they cover a wide price range. The gear shifter is what allows you to change gears. The first type of shifters were levers known as friction shifters. These worked simply by pulling the cables attached to the derailleurs.
Friction shifters can be troubling because the way they're designed you can easily get caught between gears and accidentally damage your gears or even wreck. The more advanced variety of shifter is known as the index shifter.
Index shifters have specific stopping points and are calibrated to perfectly shift from gear to gear. They remedy the drawbacks of the older friction shifters. Gear shifters may be placed anywhere from the frame to the handlebar base to the grips to models which seem to be part of the brake levers.
Mountain bikes have multiple gears to make it easier for you to negotiate difficult terrain. Higher gears are there to help you speed downhill or across the flats, and lower gears are there to help you surmount those difficult inclines. Remember, it's best to shift gears when you're not putting a lot of stress on your pedals. Shifting when there's heavy pressure on the pedals can damage your shifting system.


US $13.00



but we got mad speed.. C.Givens from wylie 10.2.. my dude Y lou go bout 10.3.. and a plethora of others runnin bout 10.5
I am tempted, after 's suggestion, to get another bike – do I go Mountain or Hybrid?
The Vanilla Trike was custom built by bike maker Sacha White for his daughter, which costs him aroun..(more…)
A map connecting the myriad risks to the global economy. Last weekend, the World Economic Forum held its annual meeting at Davos, and the theme this time was “Improve the State of the World.” Which naturally meant coming to terms with the risks out there. Their economists came up with a comprehensive list and assigned probabilities to each–and also mapped the linkages between each one. Then they summarized all those findings in a handy dandy interactive map that’s sure to delight paranoid conspiracy theorists everywhere: The map allows you to click on each risk, and see how it connects to others. The size of the bubble shows the likelihood of occurrence; the weight of the link shows the strength of interconnection; the weight of the bubble outline shows severity; and a handy chart on the left shows you where the risk you’ve clicked on stands, relative to the others. (Obviously, the graph is in dire need of a decent graphic designer, but hey. This is pretty great, considering the…
RT FOR SALE 2009 CHARGE – PLUG fixed gear bike.5 months use,immaculate condition payed £500….£325 ono please RT
The gear you start in depends on the weight of the load you are hauling. I usually start in 3rd gear if I have a light load, under 20,000 lbs. It also depends on your truck and what it will do. If you start in too high a gear, the truck will let you know it, she start acting like she wants to stall. You can get it to go, but it is hard on the truck. You will be able to tell what gear when you have a little more experience.
likelihood of getting run through the gut by is already high enough, no need to encourage it… no need…
Greece has supported three professional continental cycling teams in the past few years, but 2010 marks the first year it has a UCI-registered mountain bike team. The Podilatis – Bianchi squad aims to promote the sport of mountain biking in Greece while also supporting several young athletes. Greek junior national champion Nikos Tahopoulos will be on the elite men’s squad along with up and coming talent Charoun Molla Amet Ali Oglou. Dimitra Plessioti, also a road and track cyclist, will represent …
The shifter on your left side shifts the front gears, or the crank, and the shifter on your right shifts the back gears, or the cassette. When you shift, it tightens or loosens the shifter cable, which moves your derailleur which moves the chain to different gears. To go uphill and to get more power, you want the front shifter on 1 or 2 and your right shifter on maybe 1, 2, or 3. For going downhill or on level ground, you want the left one on 3, and the right one on 5, 6, or 7. With gears, if you want to turn something fast (The back wheel,) then you make the gear your pedaling on bigger, with more teeth, and the wheel's gear smaller, with less teeth, so for example the crank gear has 50 teeth and the cassette gear has 10, then for every one full pedal rotation, the back wheel will turn five times, giving you more speed. For power, though, you want just the opposite. A small gear on the crank and a larger one on the cassette.
Also remember not to have the gears set on like 1 on left and 7 on right (or vice-versa, 3 and 1,) because it puts the chain on an extreme diagonal and can stretch it out, resulting in a lot of problems. So if the left is on 1, the right should only be on 1, 2, or 3. Left 2, right 3, 4, 5, etc…
Sorry if this was kind of a novel of an answer, but hope it answered your question. If you're interested, check out this mountain biking yahoo group:
http://sports.groups.yahoo.com/group/FamilyMTBing/
Fixie bike themselves are not that bad. I personally think the bikes suck for riding, but I don’t hate on people for riding them. What think is LAME, is the hipster, tight jeans, thick glasses, elitist, fashion obsessed scene. And fixie bikes are totally part of that scene these days. The fixie bike has become nothing more than a fashion accessorie for these people. That’s what is lame. The bikes themselves are allright….. but I would never want to ride on unless I was just doing tricks.
Linux and Mac Chrome/ium still won't support Gears, but Google apps don't support HTML5: #chromium #fail
Density is mass/volume
or “lab” fees (such as 10 licenses for substantial discount). I sort of lean towards agreeing with everyone (ha ha). It’s worth more than $100 to me right now. But as Jean-Claude says, FF wouldn’t be anywhere near as good as it is now if it had had a fee originally. A big grant (such as the NSF one OpenWetWare obtained) would be appropriate. But even those aren’t stable enough. So, probably commercial or private foundation would seem best ownership.
RT the stronger a conservative pol is vs gay rights, the higher likelihood he is gay #p2
The Bicycle Tire Belt($30) made from used(recycled) bike tire. ”This tire was rescued from..(more…)
Not one person can have all the answers, thats why sharing and comparing information is key !
Yes, Feynman is teh right.
their comics cost like $75 each
There is a small motorcycle shop on I-35 just South of Beltine exit on the west side of the road and I think it is next to a tshirt shop any they have a great selection of gear and they usually have a few old motorcycles sitting out in front which you can see from the highway.