P-tension spring – two settings?

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  • #25722
    DaveE128
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  • #871619
    0
    DaveE128

    Well, ised the other setting,
    Well, used the other setting, and all works well. Though I’d still expect to need some b-tension for a large cassette :-/

    Not everyone has enough disposable income to not think twice about spending £30.

    #871617
    0
    CXR94Di2

    Frankly at £27 for a brand

    Frankly at £27 for a brand new one, why bother.  Something is wrong, it is time against cost, sorting it out.  Weigh it up.  If spring adjustment cures it, great

    #871615
    0
    DaveE128

    Argh blank post bug – here’s

    Argh blank post bug – here’s the text:

    Can’t find any info on this at all online – wonder if anyone here knows?

    I’m fitting a used but good condition 5700 rear mech to a friend’s bike, and even at minimum B-tension, the g-pulley isn’t getting anywhere near close enough to the cassette to provide good shifting. Given that this is an 11-28t cassette, that seems very odd.

    So I found that there are two settings for the P-tension springs (the one that rotates the pulley cage) and wondered whether changing this to the other setting may fix the problem? It seems that the P tension spring and the B-tension spring balance each other, so increasing the P tension should have the same effect as reducing the B-tension (which is already at minimum).

    Anyone got any experience of this?

    I wondered if the chain was too short (this would rotate the cage away from the cassette but I’ve checked the small/small and big/big combos and it looks like it couldn’t go any shorter or longer.

    Anyone know which hole of the two the P-tension spring should be in? I haven’t managed to find anything in the Shimano manuals about it.

    Might just have to give it a try and see what happens.

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