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Front derailleur indexingOnly Shimano offers full indexing on their front mechs and shifters. However it can be more trouble than it's worth and many riders prefer the freedom to choose their own mech, cranks and chainrings. Other makes offer a variety of very good 'friction' and 'micro-ratchet' shifters which can be used with any make of equipment. Front shifts aren't difficult to achive by the traditional means of feeling and listening - that is, if everything is set up properly in the first place. Just be prepared to finetune your front shifter if the chain rubs the mech's cage when you change gear at the back.
Problems with triple chainsetsAlways use a front mech designed for three chainrings. Modern ones suit outer rings between 44 and 52 teeth and with an 8 to 12 tooth jump to the middle ring. The further you deviate from these sizes the more likely you are to have problems, although your inner ring can generally be as small as the mech's overall capacity will allow. You can customise all your chainrings if you bear the following in mind:
Shifts from the inner to the middle chainrings will be poor if the middle one is too small. Place a straight-edge across all three rings, as shown, to check if this might be a problem. In general the middle chainring should not be less than halfway between the other two, but you can often overcome this restriction by reducing the height of the inner ring's spacers or by placing thin ones under the outer ring. (But don't create a gap large enough to swallow the chain between adjacent chainrings, or so small that the chain rubs the next ring.)
Problems with double chainsetsDouble chainsets rarely cause problems and you should be able to shift across jumps of up to 20 teeth.
Problems with single chainsetsYour chain may occasionally be thrown off a single chainring. One solution is to fit a dummy front mech to guide the chain. You will probably also need a front shifter so you can finetune its position when the chain rubs after changing gears at the back. However... having gone to all that trouble, why not simply fit another chainring or two and increase your spread of gears?
Front derailleur capacityManufacturers are cautious with their specs and you may be able to push mechs further than they say. To check if you can fit a smaller inner chainring, put the chain on the smallest rear sprocket and measure the gap between the chain and the bottom of the front mech cage. You can reduce the chainring size by one tooth for every 2mm of gap. You may also be able to increase the capacity of your front mech by carefully grinding the lower edge of the cage's outer plate. Most bench grinders have the right curvature for this job.
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