Has anyone ever used a long enough straight edge to reach from the front sprocket to the rear sprocket to check the physical alignment of the two?
I absolutely agree with the sentiment voiced above. I've ridden tons of miles on bikes and never had to replace a countershaft sprocket due to excessive wear on
the splines. To me that screams that there's a problem that isn't being addressed. I wonder if the semi-automatic Spyders have a higher or lower replacement rate
than the manual ones. Or the twins more than the triples.
I absolutely agree with the sentiment voiced above. I've ridden tons of miles on bikes and never had to replace a countershaft sprocket due to excessive wear on
the splines. To me that screams that there's a problem that isn't being addressed. I wonder if the semi-automatic Spyders have a higher or lower replacement rate
than the manual ones. Or the twins more than the triples.