Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (2024)

Most bikes have a range of gears to enable you to crest a climb, carve down a descent and everything in between.

In theory, all of the gears are at your disposal but on some systems, it’s best to avoid using certain gear combinations. This is typically referred to as ‘cross-chaining’.

Cross-chaining is a complicated and controversial subject. In this guide, we’ll take you through exactly what cross-chaining is, why you shouldn’t cross-chain and how to avoid cross-chaining in the first place.

We asked Shimano and SRAM for their opinions and some of the responses may surprise you. We also contacted Campagnolo, but the brand declined to comment.

What is cross-chaining?

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (1)

Cross-chaining is the act of riding in the smallest or largest cassette sprocket and the corresponding chainring at the same time.

For example, on a double chainring setup, this is the smallest cassette sprocket and the smallest chainring, or the largest cassette sprocket and the largest chainring.

The chain performs optimally when it is in a straight line. Cross-chaining forces your chain into an extreme angle, reducing efficiency, increasing wear and harming shifting performance.

What is a ‘chainline’?

In the strictest sense of the word, chainline is a measurement taken from the centre of your rear hub to the middle of the freehub.

For the crankset, it is a measurement taken from the centre of the bottom bracket shell to the space between the chainrings on a 2x setup, or where the chainring sits on a 1x setup.

As mentioned, the chain performs best when running in a straight line. Some refer to this as an ‘optimum’ or ‘efficient’ chainline.

Okay, show me an example of cross-chaining…

Cross-chaining on a 2x drivetrain

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (2)

On a 2x drivetrain, cross-chaining typically refers to when you are riding in the smallest chainring and cassette sprocket, or in the biggest chainring and cassette sprocket.

It’s also generally recommended to avoid riding in the second smallest sprocket when in the small chainring.

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (3)

SRAM says “with 2x, big-big is fine”, but it specifically discourages riding in a small-small combination because “the chain tension is low, which may result in chain drop, and there’s a small risk of inadvertent chain pick-up by the large ring”.

Shimano’s response is more coy – the brand says its rear derailleurs are designed to sit at a certain position, depending on how many chainrings they are paired with, although acknowledges there is more friction when cross-chaining.

Cross-chaining on a 1x drivetrain

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (4)

Whether cross-chaining is something to worry about on 1x drivetrains is a little murkier, given there aren’t multiple chainrings and the two opposing ends of the cassette represent your easiest and hardest gears.

SRAM’s take is simple: “There’s literally no such thing as cross-chaining with a 1x system”, with the brand advising riders to “ride the gear that feels best”.

Like SRAM, Shimano says riders shouldn’t be concerned with cross-chaining on the brand’s 1x drivetrains.

However, an optimum chainline for drivetrain efficiency still exists for 1x drivetrains.

Using the cogs towards the middle of the cassette, which results in a straighter chainline, is more efficient and quieter.

Why is cross-chaining bad?

When you cross-chain, the chain is made to run at a more extreme angle because it runs diagonally, potentially increasing friction and strain on the drivetrain components.

Drivetrain wear

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (5)

The additional friction generated by cross-chaining is often thought to lead to increased wear. Because the chain is put under more tension, it’s likely to wear faster, meaning you’ll need to replace the chain more often.

That’s the common thinking, anyway – but SRAM disagrees. SRAM says “cross-chaining has no effect on chain wear. The effect of cross-chaining on the big cog and big ring is insignificant”.

The brand recommends simply picking the gear ratio that feels best to ride, with the exception of the small-small on a 2x system.

Longer chain length

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (6)

When you ride in the big-big combination, the chain is at its longest possible length.

If the chain is too short, the rear derailleur is put under more strain in this gear, especially if the chain is slightly too short.

If the chain has been cut too long, when you ride in the small-small combination, the chain will droop onto the driveside chainstay. This will be noisy and you may drop the chain when riding on rough terrain.

Noise

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Cross-chaining will almost certainly be noisy because the chain is put under more strain.

You may also hear the noise of the chain rubbing on the inner cage plate of the front derailleur.

A bike with a poor chainline (where the chainrings or cassette sit too far inboard or outboard relative to the other) may also be noisier.

The chain may also hit the chainstay if you ride in the small-small combination because the chain is under the least amount of tension.

On some drivetrains, manufacturers build a trim function into the front shifter. This moves the front derailleur slightly inboard or outboard to prevent the chain from rubbing when cross-chaining.

Power loss

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (8)

It is generally thought to be more efficient not to cross-chain, given the increased friction of the chain rubbing against the front derailleur or cassette teeth and the sub-optimal chainline.

An efficiency test conducted by Velonews between 1x and 2x drivetrains found a ~5 watt difference riding in the 39-11 compared to the near-equivalent 53-15 gear.

How to avoid cross-chaining

On a multi-chainring setup (2x or 3x), if you notice you are about to cross-chain, you should consider changing chainring.

For example, if you're riding on the big chainring and the second largest sprocket, swap to the easier chainring and change down a gear. You’re effectively achieving an equivalent gear ratio with a better chainline.

Do electronic groupsets prevent cross-chaining?

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (9)

Some electronic groupsets have features to prevent you from cross-chaining.

Shimano, SRAM and Campagnolo allow you to ride in the biggest cassette cog and chainring.

However, on Shimano’s 11- and 12-speed Di2 road bike groupsets, the brand prevents you from riding on the two smallest sprockets when using the inner chainring.

Shimano also offers Synchro Shift. This feature shifts the front and rear derailleur automatically as you select a harder or easier gear, maintaining an optimal chainline and offering the smoothest possible steps through gears.

On SRAM’s eTap AXS groupsets, the brand prevents the system from shifting into the small-small combination on a 2x setup.

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (10)

Campagnolo bucks the trend with its Super Record EPS 12-speed groupset, because you are allowed to cross-chain. However, if you happen to be riding in the small-small, the front derailleur automatically self-adjusts to prevent the chain rubbing on the outer cage plate.

SRAM and Shimano’s electronic front derailleurs also have an ‘auto-trim’ function.

Should you ever cross-chain?

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (11)

Ideally, you should avoid cross-chaining.

However, this can be hard to remember when you’re riding at the limit, so don’t worry if you find yourself accidentally cross-chaining from time to time.

In a race scenario, if you’re heading up an incline that isn’t steep enough to warrant changing into the inner chainring, it arguably requires less effort to cross-chain than to concentrate on shifting the front derailleur.

Cross-chaining explained: Shimano and SRAM on drivetrain wear and efficiency (2024)

FAQs

How bad is cross-chaining? ›

The additional friction generated by cross-chaining is often thought to lead to increased wear. Because the chain is put under more tension, it's likely to wear faster, meaning you'll need to replace the chain more often.

Can you use Shimano chain on a SRAM drivetrain? ›

Can you put a Shimano chain on a Sram drivetrain and vice versa? Yes and no. As long as the speeds match, it theoretically should work. In the real world, we have noticed that Shimano chains on Sram cassettes and chainrings tend to not line up with the teeth on the cogs perfectly.

What is an example of cross-chaining? ›

cross-chaining comes in two flavours. First, there's when you put the bike in the small, inner chainring at the front, and the small, outer cog at the back. Secondly, there's when you ride in the big, outer chainring at the front and the big, inner cog at the back.

What is the most efficient road bike chain? ›

The YBN SLA remains Zero Friction Cycling's top recommendation due to it's overall balance of outright efficiency, outstanding longevity, and coatings that get along very well with fastest lubricants on the market (Mspeedwax / UFO etc).

Are you supposed to change gears while pedaling? ›

The fundamental idea is that in order for the gears to change, you must be pedaling. Always shift when moving since the derailleurs must be operating with the chain moving ahead. You must strike a balance between pedaling lightly and softly while applying enough pressure to ensure a seamless gear shift.

What gear combinations should I avoid? ›

I also remember he mentioned avoid using small- small (I guess that would be 3 front - 1 back), and big-big would be 1 gear front and 8th gear on the back. Because the chain tension will be too tight, and not safe for the chain.

Is it OK to mix SRAM and Shimano? ›

SRAM's cassettes and chains are compatible with all of Shimano's groupsets, and vice versa. Likewise, Shimano and SRAM buyers have the freedom to mix different levels of chains and cassettes so long as they are designed for the same kind of transmission.

Is SRAM drivetrain better than Shimano? ›

SRAM's innovative T-Type Transmissions have become the hottest mountain bike drivetrain available and most brands are choosing SRAM Transmission for their top-spec builds. Shimano's 12-speed mechanical Deore and SLX groups are still better budget options, but at the high-end, SRAM is leaving Shimano behind.

Is there a difference between Shimano and SRAM chains? ›

The inner links of the Shimano chain are so much longer, that the chain binds on a Sram chain ring and the 50t "Eagle" gear of the cassette. You may get away with a new Shimano chain on used Sram sprockets, but new or even lightly worn the compatibility is less than ideal.

How does a cross-chain work? ›

Cross-chain bridges increase token utility by facilitating cross-chain liquidity between distinct blockchains. A cross-chain bridge typically involves locking or burning tokens on the source chain through a smart contract and unlocking or minting tokens through another smart contract on the destination chain.

What is the cross-chain function? ›

Cross-chain functionality enables developers to build natively cross-chain applications where a single unified dApp instance can function across multiple different smart contracts deployed across multiple different blockchains instead of having to deploy multiple individual versions across distinct networks.

What is the cross-chain structure? ›

Cross-chain technology refers to the ability to transfer data and tokens between different blockchains. The Web3 landscape is increasingly becoming multi-chain, with the dApp ecosystem existing across hundreds of blockchains, layer-2 networks, and appchains.

Are Shimano chains worth it? ›

While Shimano's chains are known for their precise shifting (in conjunction with the company's chainring and cassette designs), the 12-speed chain is also one of the most durable on the market, according to independent testing.

How many miles should a road bike chain last? ›

Expect between 1,500 and 3,000 miles from a 10-speed chain. It helps to establish what counts as 'worn out'. A chain is worn enough to affect transmission efficiency when it lengthens by 0.75% but has some life left if extended mileage is the aim, in which case it should ideally be replaced when it lengthens by 1%.

Which is better, Shimano chain or KMC chain? ›

If you're on Shimano systems with hyperglide + you're going to want to run an actual shimano 12 speed chain. without it, you won't have the benefits of hyperglide +. A KMC chain can work, but it will not be ideal.

Should you criss cross safety chains? ›

Two strong safety chains should be crisscrossed to support the trailer's coupler if it becomes disconnected from the towing vehicle.

Does cross chaining make noise? ›

The chain, moving more diagonally, will not enter or exit the teeth of the chainrings and the sprockets the same, creating more friction, less precision, more noise and if you use it under a lot of pedaling power, you can even break it.

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