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Shift lever loose on rear derailleur shift
I have Shimano 105 flight deck shift levers, mated to Shimano 105 rear
derailleur on a touring bike. Recently, when pushing the right hand (rear derailleur) shift lever to the left in order to shift from a smaller to a larger rear sprocket it often requires two pushes - the first push is very loose and then it finally catches and increases tension. It seems to me this might be due to a gummed up or sticky rear derailleur cable but I'm not sure. Has anyone else experienced this and know a fix? Larry Gagnon ******************************** to reply via email remove "fake" |
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"Larry Gagnon" wrote:
I have Shimano 105 flight deck shift levers, mated to Shimano 105 rear derailleur on a touring bike. Recently, when pushing the right hand (rear derailleur) shift lever to the left in order to shift from a smaller to a larger rear sprocket it often requires two pushes - the first push is very loose and then it finally catches and increases tension. It seems to me this might be due to a gummed up or sticky rear derailleur cable but I'm not sure. Has anyone else experienced this and know a fix? That doesn't sound good. The more common symptom is sluggishness when shifting to a smaller cog. That can sometimes be helped with a WD-40 flush. In your case, it sounds more like something isn't "catching" in the lever. I was on a ride once when someone's lever just stopped shifting at all when he moved the lever. We managed to get him home by using the der limit screw to get him in a middle gear. If you're bike/lever is less than 2-years old, you're covered under warranty. Art Harris |
#3
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Larry Gagnon wrote:
I have Shimano 105 flight deck shift levers, mated to Shimano 105 rear derailleur on a touring bike. Recently, when pushing the right hand (rear derailleur) shift lever to the left in order to shift from a smaller to a larger rear sprocket it often requires two pushes - the first push is very loose and then it finally catches and increases tension. It seems to me this might be due to a gummed up or sticky rear derailleur cable but I'm not sure. Has anyone else experienced this and know a fix? Larry Gagnon ******************************** to reply via email remove "fake" After ensuring the inner wire and housing are nbot the culprit, a flush with the STI repair kit, WD-40 followed by a spray lube may bring it around. But if not...there are two types of STI, those that have failed and those that will..Campagnolo ERGO and a Campag rear der will solve your problems..no more tired and confused shifters. |
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Qui si parla Campagnolo (Sat, 02 Apr 2005 09:47:21)
wrote: But if not... there are two types of STI, those that have failed and those that will.. That can be said about *anything*. Campagnolo ERGO and a Campag rear der will solve your problems..no more tired and confused shifters. What, Campy levers never fail? -- Dave, who might just take Peter's advice if his old Shimano levers fail. |
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