Bicycles Asked by user1991 on August 19, 2021
I have an old Giant Peloton Lite. Certainly considering its age, it’s a very nice bike. The front chain ring is a bit worn out, however, and I’m looking to replace it.
I have a few questions about that:
I know these might sound like naive questions, but, I’m learning and having fun doing that. Thanks for your help.
(To further specify: it’s a 2×6 Exage 500 drivetrain)
Chainring replacement is pretty easy. It's easier if you take the crank out of the bike but you may be able to get the rings over the spider and crank arm without removing the crank.
You can find instruction videos for pretty much every bike wrenching task. Here is one for chainrings.Note you will need a special chainring bolt tool to fit in the long thin slot on the back of the chainring bolts.
Just get a replacement chainring from a known 3rd party manufacturer, these are not hard to find in the major online bike component stores. You obviously need a ring that has the correct bolt circle diameter (BCD) and bolt pattern.
If you have 53/39 chainrings and you should replace them with the same size. 50 tooth rings are designed to be used on compact chainrings with a 34 tooth small ring. If you fit a 50 tooth you'll have a large reduction in gear ratios on the big ring and a smaller ratio gap between the big and small rings. Older cranks with 130mm BCD won't take small rings smaller than 39 teeth.
Sprocket and chainring wear is accelerated by worn chain 'stretch' (the bushings wear allowing each link to move slightly further apart from its neighbors). If you have worn you chainring out chances are your chain and sprockets are worn too. It's a good idea to replace the freewheel, both rings and chain all together. A worn chain on new sprockets or rings has a tendency to slip over the teeth.
Answered by Argenti Apparatus on August 19, 2021
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