The greatest advantage of a Chainglider, after eliminating attention to the chain, is that its efficiency over any day, and for the entire life of the chain inside it, as I have proven with my experiment of running the chain on the factory lube for its entire life, is a constant. That is not true of an open chain, or indeed a Gates belt the efficiency of which between cleanings can only decline. I fail to believe that a dirty Gates belt is as efficient as a clean one.
As for failing to make a properly sized Chainglider work with the bike, the fellow who threw away a Chainglider should have consulted here before he threw it away. There may have been something I missed, but the sum of experience of trouble with Chainglider here amounts to:
1. A mismatched Chainglider leaving chainring teeth exposed. Obviously that won't work.
2. Chaingliders fitted with insufficient attention to the optimum positioning of the chain runners and the Rohloff rear section causing perceived drag. Solved by a few minutes of moving the parts, which are stepped, in and out first on the top and then on the bottom, until it runs silently and without drag. We don't have even one report that this simple remedy failed to deliver the Chainglider's promise.
3. Far more serious than either of the easily solved problems above, on some bikes the frame interferes with the correct positioning of the Chainglider. Nobody liked paint rubbed off an expensive bike. A solution touted here by some handy cyclists is simply to take a pocket knife or a file or a small surfers to the Chainglider and carefully remove only enough material to provide clearance.
4. Hebie not making the Chainglider in all the configurations popular with tourers. But even this has a workable solution, as John Saxby has demonstrated by tidy surgery on the part of the Chainglider covering the rear of the chainring to achieve a ratio not refreshed by Hebie.
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I must say that, even if there is a cover for the Gates Belt that will keep it clean for life, and therefore entirely obviate any necessity for cleaning or other service, I would still want several questions answered before I splash out several times the price of a crankset and a sprocket and a chain to change my bike's transmission.
1. What is the actual expected lifespan of the Gates Drive with the cover? The cover is important for keeping your street clothes clean if you cycle in them. Last I heard, Gates Corporation was claiming no more than the mileage per chain under a Chainglider expected by several posters here. The Chainglider trebled the distance I got out of a chain, but I could have done better by not throwing off chains at two-thirds advised elongation, by riding them to the full advised elongation.
2. What is the efficiency of a Gates Drive in comparison with a Chainglider-covered chain?
Longrange tourers will no doubt have further questions.
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If satisfactory answers are forthcoming, I might reconsider the cost of a Gates Drive conversion simply so as not to get my hands dirty when I change a chain worn out inside a Chainglider.
Or I might just invest a tenner in a big box of plastic gloves and a pot of barrier cream.