E-MTB chain rotation
- formula400
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E-MTB chain rotation
What’s the score with chain rotation???
My mate mentioned I should do it every 300 miles or so to even out wear???
What’s the principle behind this??
Cheers
My mate mentioned I should do it every 300 miles or so to even out wear???
What’s the principle behind this??
Cheers
CBR650r 
- MingtheMerciless
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Eebs eat chains, even with a regular chain check, when you come to replace the chain at slight wear you’ll find the cassette skips in the smaller cogs with the new chain meaning it’s put the old chain back on and run to destruction.
Keeping say 3 chains in rotation and swapping out at 300 miles will stretch the life of the system and you’ll get more mileage out of the cassette, something to bear in mind if your running an X01 cassette…….ask me how I know?



Keeping say 3 chains in rotation and swapping out at 300 miles will stretch the life of the system and you’ll get more mileage out of the cassette, something to bear in mind if your running an X01 cassette…….ask me how I know?
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- formula400
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Mine has a Cassette: SRAM XS-1295 Eagle Transmission 10-52T
So I guess I need a new chain and chain tool
So I guess I need a new chain and chain tool
CBR650r 
- Mr Moofo
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Nope - just a GX or above chain. They will come with a magic link - which you will need to pop apart (with a lot of frustration, unless you have the right tool). Then do the reverse with the new chain.formula400 wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2026 2:23 pm Mine has a Cassette: SRAM XS-1295 Eagle Transmission 10-52T
So I guess I need a new chain and chain tool
I change mine every 800 - 1000 kms. The more turbo / in restricted you use, the more hammering the chain takes. I am up to 2.5 k on mine and haven’t replaced the rear cassette yet
- MingtheMerciless
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Tool will be needed to get the correct number of links chain length.
"Of all the stories you told me, which ones were true and which ones weren't?"
"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
"Especially the lies."
"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
"Especially the lies."
Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Couchie advised me to swap chains at 500 miles. I did that then at 1000 miles I put the 1st chain back on, no issues with chain skipping in any gear. I ticked over 1500 miles on sat, chain is still in wear limit.
Eebs eat chains if you leave them in high gear and use low cadences / high torque. Change down and spin high cadences eases the load on the motor / drive train.
Eebs eat chains if you leave them in high gear and use low cadences / high torque. Change down and spin high cadences eases the load on the motor / drive train.
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mboy
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
As @MingtheMerciless and @crust says... Basically you can swap them regularly to reduce chain wear on the cassette, but you can also spin lower gears at higher cadences to reduce wear too.
OR... And the method I prefer... Check the chain for stretch regularly and just swap it for a new one when it gets past 0.5% wear, cos if you allow it to get to 0.75% it'll start accelerating wear on the cassette (and modern cassettes aren't cheap!), and if it gets to 1% it's probably already done enough damage that you need to change the cassette too regardless... I've had as many as 5 chains to a SRAM cassette this way, and many thousands of miles, before the cassette was ready for the bin...
The other school of thought is swap to a much cheaper drivetrain, wear the whole lot out as a unit, then just replace everything as a whole when it's all worn out.
OR... And the method I prefer... Check the chain for stretch regularly and just swap it for a new one when it gets past 0.5% wear, cos if you allow it to get to 0.75% it'll start accelerating wear on the cassette (and modern cassettes aren't cheap!), and if it gets to 1% it's probably already done enough damage that you need to change the cassette too regardless... I've had as many as 5 chains to a SRAM cassette this way, and many thousands of miles, before the cassette was ready for the bin...
The other school of thought is swap to a much cheaper drivetrain, wear the whole lot out as a unit, then just replace everything as a whole when it's all worn out.
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Couchy
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Tbh these days as above I’m running cheaper cassettes and chains and replacing both when worn, lasting around 1200 miles so a couple of times a year. Not riding in really bad conditions and always spinning at a high cadence helps life too.
- Mr Moofo
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
The local Trek dealer has has just rung me up and quoted me 560 GBP - rear suspension bearings and the cassette and chain are completely worn out.
Odd - the chain was absolutely fine when I replaced it 200 miles ago. Cassette doesn’t jump. So they can do the bearings but leave everything thing else alone
Odd - the chain was absolutely fine when I replaced it 200 miles ago. Cassette doesn’t jump. So they can do the bearings but leave everything thing else alone
- formula400
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
Right thanks for all that.
Is it just E-MTB’s that do this??’because of all the power?
I like the 0.5% and just change it, idea.
Right what a decent chain to get that’s easy to split and then rejoin??
Cheers
Is it just E-MTB’s that do this??’because of all the power?
I like the 0.5% and just change it, idea.
Right what a decent chain to get that’s easy to split and then rejoin??
Cheers
CBR650r 
- MingtheMerciless
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Re: E-MTB chain rotation
All bikes wear chains but the ridiculous power and torque of EMTB's dramatically accelerate this and also the propensity for E-Bikers to sit in the smaller cogs of the cassette all the time. My LBS say that even at 0.5% wear you can get skippy new chain in the smaller cogs on an E Bikers cassette.
"Of all the stories you told me, which ones were true and which ones weren't?"
"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
"Especially the lies."
"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
"Especially the lies."
