Found a crack on the inside of one of my cranks so I'm up for some new ones! I'm actually going to do the whole drivetrain.
I'm after some advice on crank length. I found this:
http://www.machinehead-software.co.uk/b ... lator.html
Which says that my current crank length is no good. (172.5mm) I also found this:
http://www.nettally.com/palmk/crankset.html
Which says my cranks are fine! Any ideas?
Also, I'm currently running Dura Ace 7800 groupset but I'm open to suggestion for what to look for in a decent drivetrain. Budget is around $500 for the crankset.
Cheers!
Crank length
-
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: 09 Sep 2008, 01:43
- Location: Marrickville
You should probably tell us how tall you are before we go any further....
- mikesbytes
- Posts: 6991
- Joined: 13 Nov 2006, 13:48
- Location: Tempe
- Contact:
What Alex means is the length of your legs.
But before you get too hung up, do some education on foot velocity. You will see that shorter cranks = higher cadence to provide the same foot velocity. To simplify the mathematics your looking at about one extra tooth on the big ring per extra 5mm of crank length or to put it another way. If you were using a 48t ring on your fixie with 165 cranks and you swapped to 175 cranks, then you would change to a 50t ring to maintain the same foot velocity.
But before you get too hung up, do some education on foot velocity. You will see that shorter cranks = higher cadence to provide the same foot velocity. To simplify the mathematics your looking at about one extra tooth on the big ring per extra 5mm of crank length or to put it another way. If you were using a 48t ring on your fixie with 165 cranks and you swapped to 175 cranks, then you would change to a 50t ring to maintain the same foot velocity.
-
- Posts: 145
- Joined: 11 Dec 2011, 18:47
In my experience crank length doesn't make any obvious difference within reason. I have 165mm cranks on the fixie, 170mm on the commuter and 172.5mm on the road bike. Between those three values I can't tell the difference.
Mike, I'll do some research on foot velocity. Thanks!
I'm 182 cm tall with an inseam measurement of 80cm.You should probably tell us how tall you are before we go any further....
That's helpful, thanks Andrew.In my experience crank length doesn't make any obvious difference within reason. I have 165mm cranks on the fixie, 170mm on the commuter and 172.5mm on the road bike. Between those three values I can't tell the difference.
Whilst there's logical paper reasoning based on biomechanics for matching crank length to leg length, there's no performance based experimental data to back up the theory. So it's a case of applying some common sense, logical belief and personal preference.In my experience crank length doesn't make any obvious difference within reason...
You can't be serious right? Differentiating 5mm crank length difference (or 3%) off a casual photo?Please post a picture of yourself astride your bicycle so that we may make educated assessments.
For what it's worth, my own opinion is that I've never been able to tell how long my cranks are (I used to be 6' 1'' ) without looking at the stamp. Seems to make a big difference tho' whether on some corners you can still pedal around them.
Don't put long cranks on a fixie.
Don't put long cranks on a fixie.
Thanks Rhys. That hook looked too nasty.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 15 guests