So I adjusted my chain. But after adjusting it, I put the bike up on the center stand and ran the chain a bit to check that all was good and I have a horrendous amount of chain noise. It really sounds like the normal whir of a chain, except much much too loud. Upon doing lots of research on the issue, I lubed it, and rechecked my tension. I do have the manual and it is tightened to spec. Both sprockets and the chain have about 1000 miles on them, under my butt: I installed them, I rode them. As far as I can see, all are in good shape. I can't remove the cover at this time as I don't have the tools I need here with me at college and I will have to replace the bolts as the heads are all almost stripped. I would have expected a chain to get quieter with use, not louder, at least until the chain is in terrible shape and stretched or the sprockets are shot. I did attempt to change the wheel alignment back and forth by only changing one side adjustment in case my marks are out of synch, but this seems to be to no avail (And I returned them to matching after not getting results). I have not had a chance to try a string test, hopefully in the next couple days I can do this. I cannot hear the chain noise over the sound of the engine (Currently in the city at college, so this is only to about 35 mph) but it is very noticeable if I clutch and roll off the throttle.
Also, one thing I did notice that seemed a tad odd, the rear sprocket has all of the paint wore off to the depth that the chain can reach on the outer side, but only about half of it is wore off on the inner side. I'm pretty sure that this wear is only paint deep, it isn't gouging the metal. To me, this seems like the tire was slightly out of alignment, but I can't really decide which way I think it was off. (I can't decide if a tire aligned with, for example, the front being too far left would wear the paint off the left or right. If it was a straight bar, it would totally be easy, but a chain could be rubbing on the top or bottom and that would change the side of the sprocket it wears. Would it be reasonable to thing that the top side would wear more, being under tension while the bottom should be more free running?)
So my first question is, is there a preferred chain lube, heavier to dampen noise or not?
Also, what is a normal chain volume? It used to be really quiet. I never noticed it at all, except a slight whir if I would clutch and kill the engine on a test drive to listen to brakes or something.
And until I check the string alignment, is there any other ideas that anyone might have for me to check out?
Also, I'm an engineer, so give me the nitty gritty; I'd rather ask someone to explain what they mean and learn something than to get the watered down answer that might fix it without teaching me anything for the future.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Keep the shiny side up,
Bryce
Comment