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Old 23-Jun-2005, 19:39
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DSC Member Shazaam! Shazaam! is offline
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Chain Inspection and Freeplay Adjustment

As a chain wears it stretches and gets longer, but it doesn’t necessarily stretch the same amount at each and every link. So, in order to adjust the chain freeplay you first need to find the portion of the chain that has worn and stretched the LEAST. You need to rotate the chain and check its slack in at least three different sections.

Every 600 miles or so, put the bike on a paddock stand and find the tightest section of chain (least droop between sprockets) by turning the rear wheel in neutral. Measure the amount it droops from the bottom of the swingarm to the lower edge of the chain. The droop will be largest at a point equidistant between the sprocket centerlines (see swingarm label.)

If this measurement is LESS THAN one inch (25mm) the freeplay should be increased. The concern here is that the chain is adjusted too tight rather than too loose. A too-tight chain will lock-out your rear suspension movement and load the chain in excess of its tensile load rating. Drive chain tensile ratings are matched to the bikes power by the manufacturer, but this tension can easily be exceeded if the chain is installed too tight. Specifically, a number of chain failures can be traced to chains that have been adjusted too tight.

Just as a reminder, before you adjust the chain freeplay, measure and record your rear ride height so you can reset it.

Ducati's specification of ONE INCH MINIMUM is directed at preventing the chain side-loading the transmission output shaft bearings when the swingarm moves upwards during the bike’s acceleration, or after hitting a bump.

The chain is as tight as it can get when the centers of the front sprocket, swingarm pivot, and rear axle are all in a straight line. This only occurs when the bike is dynamically or heavily statically-loaded. The slack adjustment spec on the swingarm plate assumes that the bike is unloaded.

Even at one inch it’ll still be tighter than many other manufacturers' recommendations. Note that Ducati doesn’t specify a maximum distance, so a 1-1/2 inch droop here would not be excessive. Not having enough freeplay is a recipe for chain failure.

This is also the time to clean and inspect your chain for any links that are unusually stiff, which indicates binding from lack of internal lubrication or corrosion caused by link o-ring failure. Also check for any link sideplate damage caused by road debris that may have gotten wedged between the chain and sprocket.

Finally, keep a trending record of any adjustment that was made.

A chain should be replaced when it has stretched excessively. Each link in a new 520 or 525 pitch chain measures 15.875mm (5/8-inch) so 16 links will measure 254mm. When a 16 link section of an o-ring chain has stretched to 257mm (under a 20Kg/44lbs load) it needs to be replaced before it fails. When a Ducati chain snaps, it will often wedge between the drive output sprocket and the engine case, destroying the case and hopefully not locking the rear wheel in the process.

Chain stretch across 16 links can be checked with calipers by first placing the transmission in gear and then rotating the back wheel so as to tension the upper strand of the chain.

[Edited on 6-23-2005 by Shazaam!]
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Old 23-Jun-2005, 20:59
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DSC Member Guido Guido is offline
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My EK chain snapped on Saturday (jinxed bike I hear you all say ) whilst shifting from 2nd to 3rd at approx 10krpm.

Thankfully it just ejected itself out the back of the bike...only damage noted was a slightly cracked carbon sprocket cover and a BMW M5 driver whom I'd just overtaken with adversely swollen eyeballs....(cue Marty Feldman impressions).

Luckily I still had the DID chain I got for £4 from Carnells' warehouse clearout sale a couple of years back (remember that bargain day Geoff R???) so was back up and running the next day.
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Old 23-Jun-2005, 21:30
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GsxrAge GsxrAge is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Guido
My EK chain snapped on Saturday (jinxed bike I hear you all say ) whilst shifting from 2nd to 3rd at approx 10krpm.

Thankfully it just ejected itself out the back of the bike...only damage noted was a slightly cracked carbon sprocket cover and a BMW M5 driver whom I'd just overtaken with adversely swollen eyeballs....(cue Marty Feldman impressions).

Luckily I still had the DID chain I got for £4 from Carnells' warehouse clearout sale a couple of years back (remember that bargain day Geoff R???) so was back up and running the next day.

Funny it was an EK chain that snapped on mine

£1500 to fix it.

Mine had only done 6 months 1500-2000 miles.

How old/ miles had yours done ?

I am incontact With EK to see what they are going to do about it as this chain life is not exceptable.

They give all o ring chains 12months unlimited milage guarantee.

[Edited on 23-6-2005 by AGE996]
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