• Motorcycle chain tension vs suspension deflection

    From bob prohaska@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 15 02:25:04 2023
    I'm getting puzzled about setting chain tension on an '01 SV650S.

    The manual says 20-30mm slack _on_the_side_stand_ but that setting
    causes a cyclic growl at low speeds, say 35 MPH. Higher speeds
    seem to quiet down.

    To me, the sound suggests a tight chain, but it's unclear to me if
    the chain gets tighter or looser as the rear suspension compresses.
    The suspension is stock, I weigh less than 150 lbs.

    At one point I dismounted the rear shock, raised the swingarm to
    maximum sprocket spacing and set the slack to zero. On the center
    stand the slack measured about 40 mm, which seemed quieter.

    After a bit of riding I started to hear noises I didn't like. When
    I checked the slack on the sidestand it seemed greater than 40 mm
    and the chain could touch the centerstand mount, obviously not good.

    So, I'm back to 25-35 mm slack on the sidestand and wondering
    what's correct. I don't like the sound, but if it's normal
    I'll quit worrying about it.

    Thanks for reading,

    bob prohaska

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Olson@21:1/5 to bob prohaska on Thu Jun 15 17:14:39 2023
    bob prohaska <bp@www.zefox.net> wrote:
    I'm getting puzzled about setting chain tension on an '01 SV650S.

    The manual says 20-30mm slack _on_the_side_stand_ but that setting
    causes a cyclic growl at low speeds, say 35 MPH. Higher speeds
    seem to quiet down.

    To me, the sound suggests a tight chain, but it's unclear to me if
    the chain gets tighter or looser as the rear suspension compresses.
    The suspension is stock, I weigh less than 150 lbs.

    At one point I dismounted the rear shock, raised the swingarm to
    maximum sprocket spacing and set the slack to zero. On the center
    stand the slack measured about 40 mm, which seemed quieter.

    After a bit of riding I started to hear noises I didn't like. When
    I checked the slack on the sidestand it seemed greater than 40 mm
    and the chain could touch the centerstand mount, obviously not good.

    So, I'm back to 25-35 mm slack on the sidestand and wondering
    what's correct. I don't like the sound, but if it's normal
    I'll quit worrying about it.

    My position has always been that you always want to maintain a non-zero
    amount of slack at whatever swingarm position results in the rear
    axle being the furthest away from the countershaft, with the chain
    in its tightest position. Since chains wear unevenly, this can mean
    that at its loosest point, a worn chain may result in too much slack
    when the swingarm is at a low point.

    My guess is that your chain is unevenly worn. I tend to replace chains
    when they are still technically servicable but vibrate from uneven
    wear. I'm also a big believer in replacing chain and sprockets as
    a set.

    --
    FJR1300A, GL1000, KLR650A6F, EX250J9A, DR200SE, Vespa Ciao

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From chrisnd@privacy.net@21:1/5 to Mark Olson on Fri Jun 16 12:21:14 2023
    On 15/06/2023 18:14, Mark Olson wrote:

    My guess is that your chain is unevenly worn. I tend to replace chains
    when they are still technically servicable but vibrate from uneven
    wear. I'm also a big believer in replacing chain and sprockets as
    a set.

    +1

    Chris
    --
    The Deuchars BBB#40 COFF#14
    Yamaha XV750SE & Suzuki GS550t
    http://www.Deuchars.org.uk

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bob prohaska@21:1/5 to Mark Olson on Fri Jun 16 21:40:29 2023
    Mark Olson <olsonm@tiny.invalid> wrote:

    My position has always been that you always want to maintain a non-zero amount of slack at whatever swingarm position results in the rear
    axle being the furthest away from the countershaft, with the chain
    in its tightest position.

    Agreed entirely. I thought that's what I was doing by setting the
    slack (tight but not too tight) with the swingarm raised to what
    seemed like the tightest elevation.

    Since chains wear unevenly, this can mean
    that at its loosest point, a worn chain may result in too much slack
    when the swingarm is at a low point.

    My guess is that your chain is unevenly worn.

    This is a novel proposition to me. There's a definite variation is
    chain slack as the wheel rotates, but I always attributed it to
    eccentricity of the sprocket, not the state of the chain.

    I tend to replace chains
    when they are still technically servicable but vibrate from uneven
    wear. I'm also a big believer in replacing chain and sprockets as
    a set.

    Agreed on the replacement as a set policy. The present chain is original,
    with less than 30k very easygoing miles on it. By "lift off the sprocket" testing the chain is essentially unworn, revealing no more than a tenth
    of a tooth on the rear sprocket.

    Being an o-ring chain it hasn't been lubricated very systematically.
    Perhaps I should start there, then check whether the chain slack cycles
    with wheel rotation or chain rotation.

    Thanks for writing!

    bob prohaska

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Olson@21:1/5 to bob prohaska on Fri Jun 16 23:32:10 2023
    bob prohaska <bp@www.zefox.net> wrote:

    Being an o-ring chain it hasn't been lubricated very systematically.
    Perhaps I should start there, then check whether the chain slack cycles
    with wheel rotation or chain rotation.

    You could knock me over with a feather if it turns out to be the
    sprocket being out of round. It's been my experience on every chain
    driven bike I've owned, that the chain wears unevenly, and the more
    it wears, the more uneven it gets.

    I used to have a Scottoiler on my '01 SV650S. It was brilliant. If I
    get another one[1], I'd definitely fit it with the touring reservoir.
    Multiple benefits- chain & sprockets last longer, longer intervals
    between adjustments, and the tiny bit of oil mist that makes it to
    the inside of the rear rim makes cleaning a snap.

    [1] My KLR650 has a Loobman manual oiler. Crude in comparison to the
    Scottoiler but still much better than no oiler.

    --
    FJR1300A, GL1000, KLR650A6F, EX250J9A, DR200SE, Vespa Ciao

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bob prohaska@21:1/5 to Mark Olson on Sat Jun 24 01:25:35 2023
    Mark Olson <olsonm@tiny.invalid> wrote:

    You could knock me over with a feather if it turns out to be the
    sprocket being out of round. It's been my experience on every chain
    driven bike I've owned, that the chain wears unevenly, and the more
    it wears, the more uneven it gets.


    Please consider yourself standing securely 8-)

    Lubing the chain very lightly (ATF diluted with kerosene)
    markely improved the chain and the noise.

    Unfortunately, in the course of looking around I discovered
    the rear brake pads are down to metal on rotor. No real damage,
    but the bike's idle until it gets new pads. Very surprised I
    didn't hear it.

    Thanks for writing!

    bob prohaska

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)