Now We're Workin' On the Chain, Gang
If you're looking for a better way
to transfer power, you may wonder if there's an option to the classic roller
chain. Belt-drive systems are popular with a lot of Harley® riders, but they
don't seem to be an option for a lot of folks, especially in high performance
or racing situations. A toothed belt's power limit is directly related to its
width. That might be okay for a stock 60HP (or 90HP) Harley® but above that a
drive belt will have to be very big to the point of widening the whole bike to
make it fit. Also, unlike chains, individual belts are not adjustable. So, for
the foreseeable future we're stuck with our old chains.
The last big step in chain
development was in the eighties with the mass introduction of the O-ring sealed
chain. Those little rubber rings have solved what was the chain maker's biggest
headache for many years: Loss of lubricant. The load bearing pins and bushings
that enable a chain to bend over a sprocket have precious little oil to keep
them happy. As if that wasn't enough, high centrifugal forces that occur when
the chain turns around the drive sprocket throws away the oil.
Chains wear because they lose lubricants. The advent of the O-ring chain enabled
the chain to keep its oil inside and stay lubricated were it counts for long
periods. The lubricant in a modern O-ring chain is not ordinary oil. It
contains plenty of synthetic additives that for example, help it withstand the
enormous loads that develop during a first-gear burn-out. Friction-reducing
additives don't really help, because Friction is not the issue. A lubricant's
film strength is what keeps the metal from touching and wearing. The moment it
is not there, wear escalates.
Tips for proper chain care. Even the cheapest chain without O-rings will last a
surprising amount of time with proper care, meticulous adjustment and oiling at
350-mile intervals. Heavy gear oil applied with a brush is what many racing
teams use, but this is a messy proposition and best only when the chain can be
left to drip away the excess overnight. Most people spray on chain lube, which
is good as long as you wait the required 20 minutes to let the solvents in the
spray evaporate and leave the thicker lubricant on the chain, rather than one
of the tire's sidewall. Chain grease is not so efficient. It cannot get into
the tight clearances between moving parts and the most good it can ever do is
keep the chain's side plates from rusting in the winter. Chain oil's main enemy
is high running temperatures. The running temperature of a chain ideally should
not exceed 160¡F. Above that, chain lubricant starts to thin, and the chances
of it seeping out past the O-rings increase; eventually the film strength
drops.
This brings up the matter of chain adjustment or rather, chain mal-adjustment,
the main culprit for "well-done" chains. Surprisingly an over tightened chain
is a far worse than a loose one. Informed riders know that suspension movement
increases chain tension, and what is a fairly tight chain at standstill becomes
impossibly tight when the suspension bottoms. These added and unnecessary
tensile loads can exceed the chain's capacity and the increased friction will
raise the chain's temperature sky-high.
A new, too-tight chain can, in no time at all, turn into history. The best way
to check chain tension, the one used by many race teams, is too ask two of your
biggest friends to sit on the bike and compress the rear suspension to the
point where the wheel spindle, swing-arm bearing bolt and the front
chain-sprocket centerline are all in line. That is the point of maximum chain
tension. Or you can compress the bike's rear end with a ratcheting tie down.
Free up and down movement at the middle of the chain's bottom run should be
about half an inch (13 mm) with the suspension compressed.
Of course, a loose, dragging-on-the-floor chain is not too good either. A loose
chain will rub on many static parts of the bike such as the swing arm rubber
buffer and frame spacers. Besides, with the chain's ability to saw through
anything in its path, the added friction will again raise temperatures. Also
the sprockets will suffer. A loose chain will "ride up" into the higher and
weaker areas of the sprocket teeth and slowly bend them into a wicked hooked
shape. Proper tensioning as explained above is the remedy.
Also, proper tensioning means a straight and true running rear wheel. A
cockeyed, sideways rear wheel will place uneven stress on the chain, making one
side of it work harder than the other. That is bad. A quick check can be made
by sighting the chain's top run, back to front. A badly misaligned rear wheel
will show as a notable kink in the chain's run line. For more exact results you
can pick two eight foot (2.5 meters) straight-edged wood boards and place each
one on either side of the bike, about 4" (100mm) above the ground. On a
properly aligned wheel, the edges should touch the rear tire sidewall and leave
equal gaps on both sides of the rear tire. Adjust your chain tensioner
accordingly.
Race teams mechanics don't crawl on the floor with wood planks. They use a
compass with two, long sharpened points to compare the distance between the
swing arm bearing pivot and the rear wheel spindle. On a dirt bike, without a
silencer getting in the way, a measuring tape will be just as effective.
Even after all this straightening it is worth checking that the chain runs even,
centered on the rear sprocket. A missing 1mm washer somewhere may cause one
side of the sprocket to make contact with the chain. If after some mileage one
side of the rear sprocket gets shiny near the teeth it means that the front and
rear sprockets are not properly aligned. A few shims or washers here and there
can cure this.
The 500 pieces or more that make up a chain lead a very unglamorous life. On
the other hand, failure of just one of them means a sidelined bike. Proper care
is not too hard on body, soul or pocketbook and is definitely worth it. If your
chain is misaligned and distressed you will certainly feel the difference in
ride quality after a well-deserved chain care session.
