Seal drag, or even more generically "hub drag", turning the cranks when a Rohloff-equipped bike is pushed is a common complaint on Rohloff fora, often under a presumption that it is an undesirable activity, or even indicative of a threat to an expensive component. Hey, that was my first response too when I was a Rohloff novice, before I thought the matter through.
But is it? I now take a different view. To me it is obviously indicative of high quality German engineering which thoughtfully took the decision to keep out dust by lightweight paper seals. There are also practical uses for this seal drag, to which I shall return.
There are standard setups to measure bearing drag, for instance a dynamometer can compare the friction loss in internal combustion engines which theoretically should put out the same shaft horses or BMEP or whatever measure turns up your wick -- but by the time you get the motor in a car on a track, that considerable amount of work by an expensive white-coat and capital-intensive equipment normally turns out to be wasted because poof! the differences disappear into more urgent feedbacks. And that is starting with big numbers, where a difference could easily be a whole unit or units even if it is a fraction of a percent. Anyway, in automobile racing or commercial consumer car development, you can't afford not to know, so you must do the work even if only to prove to second-guessers that you considered all possibilities.
On a bike, with generally small numbers to start with, not so much. With such small numbers, I like tests that multiply the differences on the whole machine in use. Note, I don't say "magnify" but multiply. Coast-down tests do this well. Of course, that's a loaded test, but to my mind that's the test that really counts, especially with a machine as well-built as the Rohloff hub gearbox. Chalo Colina was right when he quipped that a Rohloff gearbox starts being run-in about the time a Shimano Nexus box lies itself down to die -- I seem to remember that the Nexus Premium 8-speed has an MTBF (mean time between failures, assumed repairable) of 50,000km or say 30K miles. I broke two Nexus boxes a long way before that, between the two of them, but on the other hand in The Netherlands there are Nexus boxes running well enough after a hundred thousand klicks of neglect, so the official MTBF of Nexus boxes (whatever it may be -- I'm giving this from memory) sits on a very wide normal distribution. With nothing but anecdotes to go by, at best we can imagine that the normal distribution of repairs being required on Rohloff hub gearboxes will be skewed towards the high end, lotta miles. Basically, nobody knows the Mean Time Between Failures of a Rohloff box with any statistical credibility ("extremely rare" is not a technical term in statistics!), likely not even Herr Rohloff, who has torn down some particularly high-mileage boxes, and discovered no great wear. It follows that nobody knows the MTTF -- the Mean Time To Failure i.e. the unrepairable end-of-life failure -- of a Rohloff.
Also, counting anecdotes, these dragging seals are either a universal Rohloff "problem" or the owners of the gearboxes with dragging seals are abnormally articulate! So, yeah, if these dragging seals are indicative of some state threatening the lifespan of a Rohloff box, I want to multiply it to where it is a large number so I can make detailed comparisons.
But the truth is, I don't think we're ever going to know. Again, statistically, I bet the majority of Rohloff Speedhub 14s have less than 10,000km/6000m on them, while we clearly have much more than enough anecdotal evidence from a wide variety of riding circumstances that the Rohloff shrugs off such minor use, and is capable of multiples of that distance. Thus, these dragging seals are not a short-term problem, and measuring microwatts on a stand (on an upside down bike with the free oil in a place it normally isn't, as has been suggested, causing a definitely uncommon windage load) will just raise more questions than deliver answers, hence my preference for a loaded coast-down test with the bike in its normal orientation carrying its normal load -- at which point I'm pretty certain the "problem" will disappear, which is why I haven't bothered doing the test.
I confidently expect this question to reoccur again and again and again.
A personal note: I actually welcome the seal drag on the Rohloff as a very useful third hand. I use Magura rim hydraulic brakes on my electrified bike, and these hydraulics are sealed for life, so the brake cutout cannot work by changes in fluid pressure; instead it works by breaking a magnetic contact which operates by 4x magnets stuck onto the brake levers and housings with Pritt's evergummy glue-clay, a real pain to set up if disturbed. The other day, with around 11,000km on the Rohloff, the magnetics went out of whack. The non-drive side of my bike is strongly braced in case I ever want to fit a disc brake (no such chance -- I love the progressive operation of the rim hydraulics), and to fit a kickstand stand capable of holding up the 170kg load rating of the bike. You can see the three rear stays of a cross frame bike, and the punched (drillium!) brace, and other fittings which provide further triangulated bracing, by paging down on this PDF until you reach a page devoted to photographs of the frame end, which I publish so you can see that you shouldn't follow me in abusing any bike which wasn't specifically designed to take bike-abnormal loads at the non-drive rear side; my Kranich can withstand more twisting force between the head tube and the rear frame-ends than a humongous Rolls-Royce motorcar's monocoque; doing what I do could cost you your bike's warranty:
http://coolmainpress.com/AndreJute'sUtopiaKranich.pdf So to adjust the cutouts, I tilt the bike on its stand until the rear wheel is clear of the tiles, run the motor on the thumb throttle, let the thumb throttle go and, with the electronic "gearbox" in its lowest automatic (pedelec*) setting of 1, the seal drag in the Rohloff keeps the pedals turning via the chain and with them the rear wheel, where a sensor picks up the movement and keeps feeding the motor juice (perpetual motion, anyone?) while I adjust the magnets on the brake levers and housings until separating them cuts out the motor.
Rohloff seal drag to the rescue! I wouldn't give it up for all the tea in China.
*For innocents abroad, "pedelec" is a condition in which motor assistance is proportional to the speed at which you turn the pedals, so the seal-drag speed, pulling the pedals around at a low speed, is just right for adjustments which otherwise would require another person's hands or acrobatics with tie wraps on the brakes and the thumb throttle. In the software with my Bafang/8FUN BB01 installation, there is a lower speed, for parking the bike or climbing stairs, called "P", but it is accessed by pressing and holding a button on the D965 control set button group, so it too would require a third hand. In theory I can also plug in a generic computer controller to keep the wheel turning but that is too much bother as I operate Macs and would have to bring down a PC from the loft three stories up to plug in; the Rohloff seal drag is a handy, quick substitute which doesn't require you to turn off any fail-safe modes.
Copyright © 2022 Andre Jute
EDITED 21 September 2021 to clarify the different implications of
Mean Time Between Failures MTBF, which by definition are repairable failures, and
Mean Time To Failure MTTF, which is the final unrepairable failure. Thanks to Jeff Liebermann on another forum for pointing out that I should clarify the difference.