Got the answer for the first of my 3 questions about chainglider use.
1 - Are there are any performance reductions?
As far as I'm concerned, no.
Four 25 km rides over a moderately hilly, mainly rural, local route before fitting the chainglider, average speed 24.00 kph, another four 25 km rides over the same route with the chainglider 23,99 kph.
Slowest of the 8 runs 23.39, fastest 24.42 kph.
Total climbing for the 24 km circuit 210 metres, obviously the same amount of downhill.
The chainglider must make a tiny difference due to the extra 300 grams or so, but any friction generated by the thing riding over the moving chain seems to be fairly negligible, even with my imperfect setup.
I think the faint "swishing" noise, which I believe is the slightly too thick chainwheel rubbing in the front bit of the chainglider, has got quieter, but it might just be that I've got used to it.
That's a very fair report, Martin. Statistically, your rides are so well within the margin of error that we would have to say there is no performance degradation. I notice the "roadie caveat" about the influence of 300 grams, and grin, but in a 100kg or thereabouts all-up package the difference would be swamped in what you had for breakfast, and the time differential accounted for by an imperceptible change in wind speed or direction.
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It will be interesting to see at which point interior wear from a chainring/chain outwith the recommended parameters becomes visible, and whether it continues to wear, or settles when the Chainglider is worn just enough to give the unsuitable components operating space. Possibly that could be the point where it becomes totally silent. The Germans are notorious for overbuilding their components (not just bicycle gear) and then underspecifying it for public consumption: there's always a large margin built-in.
So I think it likely that in time we will discover that:
1. For marginally out of spec chainrings and chains no damage inside the Chainglider will ever be visible.
2. For any operable (but more than marginally larger than recommended) width of chain the internal marking of the Chainglider will stop when an accommodation is reached. Otherwise we would long since have heard of Chaingliders worn through in a few thousand kilometres, and we haven't.
3. A chain that is really too wide will be sticky inside the Chainglider and the drag will cause it to be removed. Speculation, of course, until some rich poster sacrifices a really thick chainring and Chainglider in the interests of bicycling science (could be a knighthood in it though...).
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Congratulations on a thorough test, Martin.
I especially liked your test course, as one of my favourite rides is 22km with, you guessed it, 210m of climbing.
Andre Jute