So by overshifting you mean the chain falls off the outside of the big ring?

Have you tried angling the tail of the derailer in a little, rather than
lining it up with the chainrings? I found orientating mine that way helped
shifting, so maybe try that, and then adjust the limit screw a touch???

Cheers,
David

"it isn't a contest. Just enjoy the ride." - Seth Vidal





On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 8:13 AM, Jim Bronson <jim.bron...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I have had my Rivendell for approximately 9 years now. During this time I
> have continually had problems with overshifting of the front derailer.
> This has continued through 4 different cranksets, two or three different
> front derailers, different brands of chains, different casettes, different
> LBSs tinkering with it and so forth.  Not to mention my own tinkering.
> I've theorized that maybe the seat tube angle on my bike is different than
> others due to the large size of my bike - 69cm, but I don't really know.
>
> I had given up on the problem and just rode the chain back on to the big
> ring if it came off that way, or stopped and put it back on the granny if
> it came off that way.
>
> I just recently as in last week switched to a Deore SGS derailer, so super
> long cage.  With so much longer of a cage, it pulls the chain back a lot
> father now when it comes off the big ring and I am afraid of something
> catastrophic happening like the chain getting tangled up in the spokes.  So
> there is a renewed urgency to do something about it.
>
> The current front derailer is a Campy Racing T, which from what I read on
> the Internet is supposed to be good at shifting compact triples.  I am
> currently running a Sugino XD600 46/36/26 crankset and also using Shimano 9
> speed bar ends.  If it makes a difference.
>
> I read something on the 650B list about bending in the leading tip of the
> outer plate to prevent overshifting.  I really don't want to trash a
> perfectly good front derailer but I'd be willing to try it if there was a
> reasonable expectation of it being successful.  To quote:
>
> "On my last successful Ritchey crank build I used an NOS first generation
> Shimano deer head with said alignment and the leading tip of the outer
> plate bent in to better keep the 9spd chain from over shifting when coming
> back up onto the big ring."
>
> Or is there a different derailer model I should be using?  I'm open to it.
>
> --
> Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
>
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