Hi, On mile 57 of a 60 mile bike ride Average pace 19 mph in Myrtle beach on a flat very rough road with no loose pebbles but pebbles in the asphalt. Chain must have bounced off and it got caught and stopped my bike while going 18-19 mph. I went down and have serious road rash on my entire left side and right knee. WHY did this happen? Anyone encounter the same? I had my bike checked recently and chain looked at. All fine. I’m very frustrated to say the least.
Did your chain fall off and go into the rear spokes? Or, did you shift into the small front ring and lose the chain into the crankset? How exactly did you crash?
Could be you didn’t have the chain installed correctly ( i.e., the right amount of links removed) and was too loose.
The possible causes in no particular order are:
One-off fluke eventWorn derailleurMis-adjusted derailleur How old is the bike (front derailleur, rear derailleur, chain)? How long has it been since anyone adjusted the front or read derailleur?
I’m not sure I understand excatly what happend. Did the chain/ rear derailleur get sucked into in the rear wheel? If the chain breaks or falls off the front chain rings you should be able to simply stop pedalling and coast safely to a stop. I have broken and dropped my chain numerous times and had a front derailleur snap off under hard accelartion without ever going down. I have a chain keeper now which also helps.
Sorry about your crash, the next week is not going to be fun.
Did not break just jammed up. Chain installed correctly. It stopped me and there was no choice but to go down.
My question was about how you got ‘jammed up’. Did the chain get sucked into the inside of the front chainrings, or did it pop all the way off and somehow get caught into your rear spokes above the rear chainstay? Or, did your rear derailleur go into your spokes?
Since you were asking us how this happened, this detail is very important.
The chain came off and prevented the pedal from turning. I do not know exactly how or why. The bike got picked up and the chain moved around after so I cannot see how it ended up. It did not break. It seems like it went over the right side of the gear because the bike is now in my garage with the chain still off in that position on the right/outside of the gear.
My rear mech on my mountain bike has a clutch mechanism to keep tension on the chain. The old groupset I had I would drop a chain now and again but since upgrading I have no problems. Is there any reason why you couldn’t have this setup on a road bike? I believe they are indexed the same. I’ve wondered that before such as when you see all the chain slap on the classic races like Paris-Roubaix over the cobbles.
The chain coming off on the front will prevent you from pedalling, but won’t stop the bike. The only way the chain comes off the rear derailleur is musadjustment or something breaking.
I’d add - which gear of the rear cassette would you of been in at the time? It sounds like you weren’t changing gear at the time but maybe confirm that?