RD Dropout...
beatpig
Posts: 97 Member
Anyone experienced failure of RD drop out?
Causes?
Aside from being AWESOME and POWERFUL*
*may or may not be true
Causes?
Aside from being AWESOME and POWERFUL*
*may or may not be true
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Replies
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No experience with it. Was it the derailleur hanger or the actual dropout itself? Hangers unbolt and can be replaced. Older bikes don't use hangers (derailleur is bolted to the frame). Google indicates it's certainly not unheard of (RD breaking dropout)
Might be time for a new frame to match the power of those beastly legs.0 -
Thankfully it was the dropout, and the frame remains in tact.
Had to remove links, take off RD and use one gear on the way home. Was annoying as was properly on form!0 -
Never had the RD to drop, but had FD break and would have to reach down and move it to different chain ring.
Wouldn't you know it, that was on a hill ride too. What a pain.0 -
Anyone experienced failure of RD drop out?
Causes?
Aside from being AWESOME and POWERFUL*
What exactly does "RD" stand for?
rear derailleurs break all the time, especially on mountain bikes. Some can be fixed, generally you just replace it.
derailleur hangers brake/bend all the time, especially on mountain bikes. Depending on the material and the frame, you can sometimes bend it back or replace it.
the actual dropout (where the axle bolts/clamps to the frame) can and do break, but this is pretty uncommon.0 -
RD - Rear Derailleur!
The hanger/drop out sheared right off whilst going up a hill...0 -
Clearly AWESOME and POWERFUL is the best answer.
But even that might be helped along by a previous crash, or just an unfortunate drop of the bike, or a bang on a rock.
Still, I gotta go with AWESOME and POWERFUL.0 -
RD - Rear Derailleur!
The hanger/drop out sheared right off whilst going up a hill...
So it's the hanger then? The small "tab" that the derailleur hangs on?
Yea, those are fairly common failure points and are generally replaceable (again, depends on frame material usually). Especially on mountain bikes (was this a trail ride or road?).
Chances are it wasn't the climb that broke it, but rather lots of general wear/tear/stress. The climb was simple the straw that broke the camel's back.0 -
I DNF'd a race due to losing my RD. Totally mangled the thing, bent/cracked the hanger, kinked the chain and somehow got it jammed into the spokes. Effing nightmare and a 5mi walk of shame out of the woods, but that's what happens when the frame can't support a high torque engine0
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Me... Break a Dropout... A Cold Forged Campagnolo Short Dropout on a Custom Bob Jackson frameset...
Just by Sprinting for the line... Dropping the RD into the back wheel, locking it solid and bringing down maybe 10 other riders...
Could be
Dropout by The Big Yin, on Flickr0