JIm:

Yea, I'd leave it alone until after your event, as long as you can deal 
with it.  You are correct in that if you really jammed it up you could be 
in serious trouble.  I've seen chains locked so tightly between the ring 
and the stay that the chain had to be broken to get it loose.  

I've used a 9 speed chain on an 8 speed without even realizing it was 
wrong, with no issues.  But I think that was with flat rings, no shifting 
aids.  Your description of the chain getting hung up on the pin sounds like 
it's not clearing the pin.  Perhaps on a 9 speed ring the pin does not 
stick out as far as on yours?  If it's always the same pin, some file or 
Dremel time may solve it.  

Is your front indexed?  If so, maybe it doesn't let the FD move inward far 
enough?  Sounds like a micro-millimeter situation, which can drive you nuts 
running it down.   

dougP

On Wednesday, February 19, 2014 1:00:04 PM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:
>
> The cranks are all original, they were new in the box 6 moths ago.  Thanks 
> for the heads up on the spacing though, I was thinking maybe I should 
> replace the big ring with a 9/10 compatible ring, but your post gives me 
> some pause if spacing is going to be a problem.  Probably more trouble than 
> it's worth on an $85 crankset.
>
> I think the BB spacing is probably a good explanation.  It's 113 but looks 
> like it could be 110.  Chainline doesn't look ideal from just eyeballing it.
>
> I took it to the shop to see what they could find out. I don't have time 
> to mess with it before Saturday, when I am riding a 400K.  Better for 
> marital harmony to spend time with the wifey than out in the garage jacking 
> with the bike, sometimes.
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 12:34 PM, Michael Hechmer 
> <[email protected]<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> Do you have the original rings on the crank?  Mixing Shimano rings and 
>> Sugino cranks, or vice versa, can cause spacing problems.  It is possible 
>> the crank was set up with a 1 or 2 mm spacer beneath the middle ring.  This 
>> is often needed to avoid jamming between the middle and small rings, but 
>> may be causing a problem for you.  Checking this is not hard but requires a 
>> few special tools - pedal wrench, bolt extractor and 5 mm allen wrench. 
>>  You need to remove the pedal, the crank arm and the small ring to get at 
>> the big-middle combo.
>>
>> Michael
>>
>>
>> On Wednesday, February 19, 2014 1:07:23 PM UTC-5, Jim Bronson wrote:
>>>
>>> I am having some problem with my chain jamming when I downshift from the 
>>> big ring to the middle ring on my Sugino XD600.  I have been observing 
>>> this, and it appears what is happening is the chain is wrapping completely 
>>> around the pin that is supposed to facilitate upshifting.
>>>
>>> Now, the XD600 is said to support 7/8 speed, and I am running a 9 speed 
>>> drivetrain, but from everything I've always read on here, it shoudn't pose 
>>> an issue.  Perhaps it is the chain I am using?  It's a SRAM PC971.  I was 
>>> thinking of trying a KMC or Shimano chain just to see if it eliminates the 
>>> problem.
>>>
>>> I really like this crankset otherwise, the 46/36/26 works really well 
>>> for the riding I do.  I just think the jamming is potentially hazardous. 
>>>  For now, I just really ease off the pressure when shifting chainrings, and 
>>> then if it does jam, it doesn't throw me for such a loop.
>>>
>>> Any advice?
>>>
>>> -- 
>>> Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down! 
>>>
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>
>
> -- 
> Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down! 
>

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