This has been a really interesting topic and I have enjoyed reading it.
My new bike has 44T/17T. I was thinking of swapping the rear to a 19T having read what Andy had to say about the subject in the Rohloff brochure (an extra £5). This would give me a range of 16.9-88.3 inches on a 160mm crank and a 26" wheel. My cadence is quite slow at between 60-70 rpm. My favourite gears are around the 51inch mark. On the 44/19 this would be around gear 10 (not the preferred gear 11).
Now having read the previous remarks, I'm wondering if I should keep the 17T and go for a smaller front, say a 38T or 36T?
What do you think?
Janet
You put less tension on the chain when you pedal with a larger chainring. Thus, if you have larger front and larger back so that the ratio of front to back is the same, chains should last a bit longer. And, chain wear occurs when each individual pin rotates within the adjacent chain link as the chain wraps and unwraps around a sprocket or chainring. Thus, a larger sprocket and larger chainring means that the pin rotates slightly less each time the chain wraps around teh chainring or unwraps off the sprocket. I am not sure if a chain will last longer with more teeth on the sprocket, but that might also occur but I think that would be very minor compared to the other issues.
I have a 16 in the rear, that is the normal size when you buy a Rohloff hub from most sellers, I did not buy my hub from SJS who usually sells 17 instead. And I wanted to have an even number of teeth so I stuck with a 16. But if they had made an 18 or 20, I might have bought that sprocket instead.
Whatever you switch to, keep your old parts in case you want them later. I use smaller chainring for touring than I use for riding around home.
If you buy the 19 and if you do not have any extra chain links you might have to buy a new chain because the two extra teeth might need more chain. I am not sure which bike you have or how much more room you have in your eccentric for adjustment.
If I recall one Thorn model has a smaller eccentric and if you have that bike you might need to ask SJS what will work.