Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

I have an Avalanche Pro Reflex 29er (entry level but I'm loving her!) MTB; after maybe 250km of riding the gear changes start to need to be 'feathered' to ensure no slipping of gears. Will a newer, upgraded cable prevent this? 

https://www.avalanchebikes.co.za/products/avalanche-reflex-29-pro-black-red?colours=black%20%2F%20red&sizes=s

Thanks for your help. 

Edited by AntVanR
Added link to view bike
  • Replies 32
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

Are the gears "slipping" or "skipping" 

Slipping = the chain and or cassette is worn and needs to be replaced (the way to distinguish - the moment you apply force to the cranks the chain slips off the teeth and all traction is lost) 

Skipping = the cable has stretched slightly and don't align the rear mech with the chosen gear anymore (this one constantly makes a noise and sometimes the chain jumps between the gears without you doing anything). 

To resolve this have a look at the attached image, you will notice a little adjustable wheel on the side where the cable comes out. Whilst riding move this knob a quarter of a turn at a time away from you i.e. forward until the chain settles in the chosen gear and the noise stops 

7D0D6CBB-AD48-4A69-8682-92AC5CF6BCA1~2.png

Posted
38 minutes ago, RobertWhitehead said:

Are the gears "slipping" or "skipping" 

Slipping = the chain and or cassette is worn and needs to be replaced (the way to distinguish - the moment you apply force to the cranks the chain slips off the teeth and all traction is lost) 

Skipping = the cable has stretched slightly and don't align the rear mech with the chosen gear anymore (this one constantly makes a noise and sometimes the chain jumps between the gears without you doing anything). 

To resolve this have a look at the attached image, you will notice a little adjustable wheel on the side where the cable comes out. Whilst riding move this knob a quarter of a turn at a time away from you i.e. forward until the chain settles in the chosen gear and the noise stops 

7D0D6CBB-AD48-4A69-8682-92AC5CF6BCA1~2.png

I was going to wait till Friday to say this. Maybe look at upgrading to shimano or SRAM that LtWoo stuff is just going to disappoint and cost you long-term. 

Posted
4 hours ago, AntVanR said:

I have an Avalanche Pro Reflex 29er (entry level but I'm loving her!) MTB; after maybe 250km of riding the gear changes start to need to be 'feathered' to ensure no slipping of gears. Will a newer, upgraded cable prevent this? 

https://www.avalanchebikes.co.za/products/avalanche-reflex-29-pro-black-red?colours=black%20%2F%20red&sizes=s

Thanks for your help. 

Add more tension in the cable first before starting  to replace stuff. Unscrew the barrel adjuster a couple of clicks while pedaling and fine tune it.  
there are a bunch of YouTube vids about it, the Park Tools how to vids are great. 

Posted
23 minutes ago, PhilipV said:

Add more tension in the cable first before starting  to replace stuff. Unscrew the barrel adjuster a couple of clicks while pedaling and fine tune it.  
there are a bunch of YouTube vids about it, the Park Tools how to vids are great. 

After 'only 250k' of riding I would tend to agree with @PhilipV that a slight adjustment should do the trick .... 

As someone once told me a very long time ago (granted in the days when there were only road or commuter bikes) "most gear shifting problems can be solved with half a turn of a barrel adjuster"

 

 

Posted

Thanks for the advice, lol figured 250km riding isn't much for this to have happened. I'll try the remedies before having a sudden derailleur failure and switching to Shimano 😆

Posted
3 hours ago, RobertWhitehead said:

Are the gears "slipping" or "skipping" 

Slipping = the chain and or cassette is worn and needs to be replaced (the way to distinguish - the moment you apply force to the cranks the chain slips off the teeth and all traction is lost) 

Skipping = the cable has stretched slightly and don't align the rear mech with the chosen gear anymore (this one constantly makes a noise and sometimes the chain jumps between the gears without you doing anything). 

To resolve this have a look at the attached image, you will notice a little adjustable wheel on the side where the cable comes out. Whilst riding move this knob a quarter of a turn at a time away from you i.e. forward until the chain settles in the chosen gear and the noise stops 

7D0D6CBB-AD48-4A69-8682-92AC5CF6BCA1~2.png

Yep, it's skipping .....

Posted

If you bought the bike new then the shop normally offers the first service for free. 

This is so that all these little niggles can be sorted out. 

Not abnormal for indexing to go out slightly in the first 250km. 

Chat to the shop and if not an option just unscrew that little barrel adjuster while riding until the shifting smooths out.

Posted

I'll add to the chorus, for what it's worth while LTwoo may not be range topping stuff, it works fine for most applications. Hold off from chucking it in the bin and just get it properly adjusted.

Park Tool's website is the place to go if you want to learn to do it yourself, which is definitely the way forward if you're likely to be doing any kind of distance you'd rather not walk.

 

Posted
7 minutes ago, droo said:

I'll add to the chorus, for what it's worth while LTwoo may not be range topping stuff, it works fine for most applications. Hold off from chucking it in the bin and just get it properly adjusted.

Park Tool's website is the place to go if you want to learn to do it yourself, which is definitely the way forward if you're likely to be doing any kind of distance you'd rather not walk.

 

@droo out of interest, have you had any experience working with either the LTwoo or Sensah components? I see a lot of thorough testing online by independent commentators (ie not incentivised to support the big 3 manufacturers), generally the conclusions are positive. I'd be keen to hear your views, thanks 

Posted
3 hours ago, Martin PJ said:

Agree with Robert, probably needs cable adjustment at the barrel. If this doesn't work, try break it and put Shimano 12 Deore derailleur. I believe the 12 speed Shimano will work with 12 speed shifter you have.

 

2 minutes ago, tubed said:

@droo out of interest, have you had any experience working with either the LTwoo or Sensah components? I see a lot of thorough testing online by independent commentators (ie not incentivised to support the big 3 manufacturers), generally the conclusions are positive. I'd be keen to hear your views, thanks 

My few cents worth is that for what I paid and what I'm using the bike for, it's a solid 👍🏼 from me. I had Shimano entry level components before and they performed far more poorly than this set up. I saw a comment earlier regarding the rear derailleur, what should it look like as opposed to what it does on the pic I posted? 😆

Posted

It's normal for this to happen on a new bike. Just a few small adjustments as mentioned and you are good to go. 

Considering the crazy prices from Sram, Shimano and Campag, brands like Ltwoo are becoming more relavent. 

I replaced the Shimano shifters on my daughter's bike with Ltwoo. Half the price of Shimano and they work flawlessly. 

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Settings My Forum Content My Followed Content Forum Settings Ad Messages My Ads My Favourites My Saved Alerts My Pay Deals Help Logout