Previous Owner had bought a new rear sprocket (50 tooth, size 530 chain) but had not installed it, and gave it to me as an "extra" with the bike. Chain and sprocket on the bike now are apparently 33-year-old originals, with about 14,000 miles on them now, about 800 of which were put on by me since buying the bike in July. The OEM chain was very floppy/loose when purchased, even with the chain adjusters in the all-the-way-back position, as apparently the chain had stretched considerably, so before riding it much I removed 3 links and re-adjusted it for now, cleaning old rust and grime off with WD-40 then spraying wax-based chain lube (the brown stuff) on it. But, even though the old chain has no kinks in it and is working fine for now, I don't trust it to last much longer, and feel safer with a new chain.
Questions:
1. What kind of chain to buy? O-ring, non-O-ring?
2. Is tensile strength an important issue on these older, not-so-powerful bikes (the local dealer said it's not)? Ads I've seen have been for anything from 6000 lbs. tensile strength to 10,000 lbs. (for those that even list it at all, others are probably less than that and I'm not going to get a chain that doesn't list its specs).
3. Is a clip-on master link still considered okay for safety/reliability (that's what the OEM chain had)? If not, what are the alternatives?
4. I understand the OEM gearing is 16-tooth front, 50-tooth rear. I have seen sprockets as low as 40 teeth advertised for a 78 GS550. What are the pros/cons of changing the gearing up/down? 40-tooth would give a much lower engine speed at a given road speed, right? I guess that would improve gas mileage, but how badly would that affect performance?
5. Do I always have to change _both_ sprockets when changing a chain? I have a new rear already (although am thinking about changing the ratio), but not a new front sprocket yet. Are front sprockets available in other sizes too (more teeth)?
I also just bought new tires (old rear is now worn to the bars), and figure on installing the chain/sprocket(s) at the same time as the new tire so I only have to remove the rear wheel once to do both jobs.
Thanks for any pointers.
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