Author Topic: Brompton derailleur  (Read 11065 times)

Brompton derailleur
« on: 20 June, 2013, 12:44:19 pm »
The parts appear to be moving freely, but it is failing to change gear - adjusting the cable means it either fails to go into 1st or fails to go into 2nd.

What part is likely to need changing? The cable is new.
Quote from: tiermat
that's not science, it's semantics.

Biggsy

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Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #1 on: 20 June, 2013, 01:28:33 pm »
There are little screws to adjust on the mech.  They work in a different way from a normal derailleur's, but have the same end result.  See the Brompton manual (online if you don't have a paper copy).

Give it a few drops of oil as well.  I think it's unlikely to need anything replaced.
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Zipperhead

  • The cyclist formerly known as Big Helga
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #2 on: 21 June, 2013, 12:41:37 am »
Mine got very unhappy about changing like that, eventually it wouldn't change unless you got off and pushed it manually. I tried lubrication, adjustment, new cable etc. None of these made any difference.

After a bout of head scratching/swearing I replaced the chain and the cogs* and that fixed it and it changes beautifully again.

* - actually I changed the chain and that's when I found out just how knackered the cogs were. The new chain kept slipping on them and they were visibly beyond the point where you might describe them as knackered.
Won't somebody think of the hamsters!

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #3 on: 21 June, 2013, 02:36:50 pm »
There are little screws to adjust on the mech.  They work in a different way from a normal derailleur's, but, but have the same end result.  See the Brompton manual (online if you don't have a paper copy).

Give it a few drops of oil as well.  I think it's unlikely to need anything replaced.

Thanks, that fixed it - they're very well hidden, aren't they? :)

I'm still a little unclear how changing the derailleur endstop has made it work, when adjusting the cable could put it in either gear so it wasn't hitting the endstops.

Zips, that's a good point, and in the past has worked for me. I regularly spend a few months in single speed before getting round to changing stuff. Recently did the cables, chain and sprockets and was surprised not to get the gears back.

Oh, and within a kilometre of fixing this, the folding pedal snapped.  :( This is proving a very expensive month in worn out bits.
Quote from: tiermat
that's not science, it's semantics.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #4 on: 23 April, 2014, 03:03:25 pm »
Sorry to revive an old thread, but I'm having a similar problem with my S2L.

Fine in first, won't change up to second when I accelerate.  So I am spinning like mad.

Have lubricated with GT85, cleaned dirt out etc.  Have adjusted the little screw.  Everything moves freely, but just won't change up.

Having another go tonight, and if still playing up, will use hubby's S2L tomorrow.

Mine is 3 years old and does 10 miles a day.  The chain does not appear to be stretched, but would it be a good idea to replace it and the two jockey wheels that are inside the derailleur (the cogs)?  They don't look that worn to me but I guess some wear could be hidden by the chain.


Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #5 on: 23 April, 2014, 03:17:33 pm »
At 8,000 miles I'd expect the chain to need replacing, but that shouldn't stop you changing gear.

Have you tried adjusting the cable? Take the back off the shifter and move the plastic doobrey into another notch.
Quote from: tiermat
that's not science, it's semantics.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #6 on: 23 April, 2014, 03:22:18 pm »
Hubby thought about that last night, but when we looked on the Brompton website, it said you shouldn't need to adjust the cable, so I have visions of him trying to take it apart and vital springs pinging across the living room followed by much cursing.  Might try that tonight though.

Zipperhead

  • The cyclist formerly known as Big Helga
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #7 on: 23 April, 2014, 04:42:13 pm »
From memory, because I haven't had to look at mine for a while. If you swing the chain tensioner out of the way (you don't need to remove it from the axle) and look at how the gear change mechanism works, it's a fork on the chain (one of the tensioner jockey wheels keeps the chain in place in the fork) but the cable pulls more than it needs to, it pulls a spring which moves the fork.

That's why Brompton say that you shouldn't need to adjust the cable.

However, the things that I would check would be - do the jockey wheels move from side to side freely?

I might also suspect that the cable isn't moving freely inside the outer housing. Again, from memory it goes in the reverse way to a normal gear cable - you insert it at the change mechanism end and push it towards the change lever and the nipple is at the change mechanism. It might be worth taking the inner cable out and seeing what state it's in, is there any rust visible on it for instance? If there is then you might get away with cleaning it and putting a drop or two of oil on before it goes back in.

[Modified to add]
I've just remembered that when my S6 started doing this on the two speed changer I went through all of the above with no joy, changed the chain, no joy. Went through my entire book of swear words, no joy. Got a friend to teach me to swear in Hindi, no joy. Put new sprockets on, sweet changing restored.
Won't somebody think of the hamsters!

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #8 on: 23 April, 2014, 04:53:37 pm »
Zipper

When you say the sprockets, do you mean the two metal ones on the back wheel?  I'm not very good with bike terminology I'm afraid.  Does the chain move from one sprocket to the other to change gear (in which case wear on those would make sense not working).


Zipperhead

  • The cyclist formerly known as Big Helga
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #9 on: 23 April, 2014, 05:21:05 pm »
Yes, sorry the two metal sprockets on the back wheel. They probably look scarily worn with teeth like a junkie, but that's how they're meant to be (to allow the chain to move from one to the other easily).

Again, yes, the chain moves from one to the other to change gear. The plastic assembly with the plastic jockey wheels keeps the chain tensioned by the arm with the bottom wheel moving against a spring, and the other wheel holds the chain into the fork mechanism which moves the chain from side to side to persuade it to jump from one metal sprocket to another.

Both of my Bromptons have got hub gears as well, and on those the sprockets are held in place by a big circlip which can be removed with a couple of screwdrivers and some swearing - I don't know about the two speed, but it's probably the same.

Looking at the SJS website it looks like it is - this is a set of sprockets for two speed (not necessarily the ratios that you have) and if you look at the picture you'll see that the sprockets have little teeth sticking inwards, which is how they transmit your power to the hub (so they are not screwed on requiring much force and swearing to remove). Once the circlip is removed from the outside end then the sprockets and spacers will just slide off.

It's always a good idea to take note of what order they are in. The sprockets are easy, the bigger one goes nearer the spokes, but the spacers may be different thicknesses. I normally line the old ones up across a newspaper while I clean things up. It helps keep the swear word count down.
Won't somebody think of the hamsters!

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #10 on: 23 April, 2014, 08:10:55 pm »
Thanks Zipper. Hubby is on derailleur disassembly and repair duty tomorrow as he has to stay at home all day while we get the boiler replaced. I am using his S2LX until mine is fixed. His is a few years older but lightly used, will probably do it good to get some miles on it. Just went up the road and it changes gear as sweet as anything  >:(

Zipperhead

  • The cyclist formerly known as Big Helga
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #11 on: 24 April, 2014, 12:33:18 am »
If he has problems getting any of it apart due to it being bastard tight, let me know. I have a yoof who is well trained in standing just out of arm (and spanner) reach and gently flinging in insults.

He will of course apologize once the offending items have been freed off.
Won't somebody think of the hamsters!

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #12 on: 24 April, 2014, 08:43:30 am »
Watched the Brompton video and tried their 'if all this adjusting screws stuff doesn't work' option of adjusting the cable at the shifter end.  Take off the shifter housing and there is a set of slots that the cable hooks in to, to tighten and loosen just move up and down a slot.  Moved up a slot to tighten, and yay  :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: it all works now.  No cursing involved.  May have seen lightbulb above hubby's head when he saw the video though.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #13 on: 08 February, 2019, 07:17:29 pm »
After a bout of head scratching/swearing I replaced the chain and the cogs* and that fixed it and it changes beautifully again.

Can anyone give a good mechanical reason why that would work?

Having had the same problem, I found this (very old) thread, followed up the links and suggestions and so on, and found it very helpful. I'd already stripped off and cleaned the sprockets (and cleaned the chain, obviously), and stripped and cleaned the chain tensioner, derailleur etc. Following this thread, I had a fiddle with the cable in the shifter. That seemed to help, and for a week or so it's been OK. Now it's sticking again.

Logic says change the cable, so I popped into a shop, but they stuck a gauge on my chain and said change the chain and sprockets. The chain's probably 6-8 months old; the sprockets came with the (lightly used) bike nearly a year ago.

The Brompton replaced the Dahon I broke. That was getting new chains every 18 months maybe, doing the exact same commuting trips. It even had a new cassette once in three and a half years! The Brompton uses basically a similar chain - none of this 11-speed stuff that wears out as soon as you walk out of the shop. On my old 5-speeds, 40 years ago, I'd have expected 3-5000 miles at least before changing a chain. I'll allow that stop-start commuting probably causes more wear than sport riding, mind you.

But the killer is that worn chains and sprockets, if anything, cause a derailleur to change too often. They don't stop it changing. So what's going on? Just to confirm, the issue is the chain not dropping onto the small sprocket.

I'll measure it myself tomorrow, and it may well need a change. But I'm not sure I won't still need a cable too...


LittleWheelsandBig

  • Whimsy Rider
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #14 on: 27 July, 2020, 10:50:38 am »
Reopening a zombie thread, I found that the upper derailleur pulley gets worn narrower by the pusher plate, which also gets worn by contact with pulley. Over several years, particularly if grime is allowed to accumulate, the derailleur limits need to opened up somewhat to compensate. Swapping the (interchangeable) upper and lower pulleys solves the problem for a few years but eventually both pulleys and the pusher plate need to be replaced.

Can you guess what I have just done with my decade-old Brompton?
Wheel meet again, don't know where, don't know when...

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #15 on: 27 July, 2020, 01:36:22 pm »
I'd forgotten this thread. For what it's worth, it's certainly true that Brompton transmissions get dirty quickly (they are nearer the ground than those on larger bikes) and need to be kept clean, and they do seem to wear out fast (probably for the same reason). However, after my previous post, one of the pulleys on my derailleur broke and I ended up replacing them as a pair. That gave me changing that's as good as new again. So the pulleys are probably more important than chain wear in determining how well the gears change, which would make sense.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #16 on: 02 March, 2021, 09:23:25 pm »
My turn to reopen this zombie thread :-)

How do you think the idlers (jockey wheels) were pushed inward to have a correct chain line and keep the idler wheels away from the cassette joint bracket?

Underneath, I guess the Sturmey Archer lock washers were used to get the bracket to be horizontal: Neither the blue/green nor the black/grey pairs of washers from Shimano match that setup.

Thank you.


LittleWheelsandBig

  • Whimsy Rider
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #17 on: 02 March, 2021, 09:41:56 pm »
Those SA washers are anti-rotation washers because hub gear axles tend to rotate in high and low gear. That is all they are meant to do. There is a pair of wheelnuts that hold the rear wheel in place and do nothing else. The Brompton derailleur is then held on by a second nut and plain washer on the drive side.

The Shimano anti-rotation washers are too thick for any of the normal Brompton axles and they won’t snugly fit the Brompton dropout anyway. What rear hub are you using in your Brompton? Is it the Alfine hub in that picture? Is it a Kinetics kit?
Wheel meet again, don't know where, don't know when...

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #18 on: 02 March, 2021, 09:54:42 pm »
I suspect the owner of that Brompton knows someone with a lathe and a milling machine. We all should.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #19 on: 03 March, 2021, 05:45:18 am »
I found that picture on the web, and am using it to investigate before asking a local bike shop to cold-set the rear triangle on my Brompton.

Assuming the SA lock washers will be strong enough to keep the Nexus from rotating… I still have to find a way to tweak the Brompton chain tensioner and move the idlers towards the hub: Once the triangle is widened, they're too far out.


rogerzilla

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Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #20 on: 06 June, 2021, 09:56:31 pm »
Anyone tried buying a 15T sprocket for a SRAM 6-speed setup recently?  Gone the way of the dodo.
Hard work sometimes pays off in the end, but laziness ALWAYS pays off NOW.

Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #21 on: 09 August, 2021, 10:51:05 am »
I also had problems with the derailleur changer on my old (~2011) 6-speed Brompton. I eventually found a simple solution - one that has not been mentioned on this page, nor anywhere else I could find online.

The problem was that when I moved the left-hand gear changer up, the chain did not move on to the smaller sprocket. I tried cleaning and lubricating the changer, including disassembling it. That didn't help. I tried replacing the jockey wheels. That didn't help either.

When I looked closely at the changing mechanism, as I moved the gear change lever up, I could see that the changing mechanism was not moving as far as it was supposed to - it was not reaching the limit stop. It did this even after I'd cleaned all the grunge and grime, and even with the chain disengaged, so there was nothing to inhibit the movement. The problem was simply that the change lever was not letting enough cable out.

I unscrewed the cover from the gear change lever. Inside I found the adjustment: there are locating groves for the outer cable housing. I moved this up a couple of places (effectively the same as increasing the length of the inner cable by a few mm). The derailleur gear then shifted perfectly. It was such a simple fix.

The bike is 10 years old, but has not done a lot of miles. It still has the original chain, sprockets, brake and gear cables. I started having trouble with the derailleur change a few years ago, and for a long time I have lived with just having 3 gears. It seems to me that the gear cable outer casing has stretched somehow. (Note that Bromptons made after 2017 have a different gear change lever.)

I hope someone might find this useful.

rogerzilla

  • When n+1 gets out of hand
Re: Brompton derailleur
« Reply #22 on: 09 August, 2021, 11:11:54 am »
The instructions cover the various slots for the cable nipple.  Generally the derailleur is not very sensitive to cable adjustment because the double spring-loaded actuator is designed so ignoramuses can shift (or, more accurately, preselect gears) without pedalling.  There is a large amount of tolerance built in to allow overshifting.

The arrangement is clever, if rather ugly and Heath Robinson-esque.

The "new" shifter and dogleg arrangement has the soldered-on cable nipple at the shifter end rather than at the "dogleg" and is actually worse to set up. 
Hard work sometimes pays off in the end, but laziness ALWAYS pays off NOW.