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Front mech adjustment — get sweet shifting in 7 easy steps

Learn how to adjust your front derailleur with this simple guide

Accurate front derailleur indexing is critical to maintaining fast, fault-free front shifting. As with all indexed gears, good performance is down to properly adjusted front derailleur limits and zeroing in on the right cable tension. Front derailleurs work hard to deliver the chain across big gaps in comparison to rear derailleurs and they need a little bit of TLC to keep them sweet. Here's how.

Our guide below shows you what we believe is the best method to index your front gears.  We've included a list of the tools and materials that you will need to complete the job and in some cases where you can buy them. If there are others that you prefer then feel free to let everybody know in the comments.

Tools & Materials

•Small Phillips screwdriver
•Cable puller
•Allen keys

Derailleur positioning

How to index front gears 04

1. Before you get too worked up about cable tension it's vital to know that your front derailleur is positioned accurately. The gap between the lower edge of the front derailleur cage and the top of the outer chainring teeth should be 1-3mm for optimal performance. The inner plate is shaped to lift and push the chain at this height. Lower and you'll foul the teeth on the outer ring, higher and the delivery will be slow and vague.  

How to index front gears 07

2. Check for cage alignment as well. Direct mount front derailleurs will automatically be lined up accurately as they're bolted direclty to the frame - which should be square. For band clamp front derailleurs, the cage should be exactly in line with the centre line on the chainrings. Shift the chain across the chainrings to see that this is the case. Make any angle adjustments at the band clamp, but be careful not to change the clamp height when you do, or you might negatively impact the cage height.

Barrel adjuster

How to index front gears 05

3. You'll need to release the cable tension in the front derailleur cable. Turn the barrel adjuster all the way clock wise to release any slack in the system. They give it a full turn anti-clockwise to give some adjustment lee-way in both directions. 

Setting cage stops

How to index front gears 03

4. To set your inner limit, first shift your front derailleur into the small chain ring and your rear derailleur into the largest cog. Adjust the inner limit screw with an appropriately sized screwdriver. Take care as the heads of the screws are easily damaged - making subsequent adjustments harder. The screw is usually marked by a small letter 'L' for Low. You want to turn the inner limit screw until the inner part of the derailleur cage is as close as possible to the chain without rubbing  (as indicated by the tip of the screwdriver in this shot).

How to index front gears 06

5. To set your outer limit, first shift your front derailleur into the large chain ring in the front and your rear derailleur to the smallest cog.  Adjust the outer limit screw with an appropriately sized screwdriver. Take care as the heads of the screws are easily damaged - making subsequent adjustments harder. The screw is usually marked by a small letter 'H' for High. You want to turn the outer limit screw, found on the top of the front derailleur body, until the inside edge of the outer cage plate of the front derailleur is as close as possible to the chain without rubbing. 1-2mm is about right. (Where the tip of this screwdriver is pointing...)

Reset cable tension

How to index front gears 01

6. Reset the overall cable tension at the cable anchor point. Use a cable puller like this BT-2 Park Tools one which grabs the cable and allows you to make fine adjustments without fraying trimmed cables. The locking feature on this particular model means once set and locked, you could let it go, while you tighten the anchor bolt.

Check shift speed

How to index front gears 02

7. When you've made your cage limit adjustments and set the cable tension, you can give the cranks a turn and operate the front shifter. You should now have a front derailleur which lifts, pushes or drops it quickly and cleanly to the adjoining ring. If the upshift is a little slow you can add tension to the barrel adjuster. 

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15 comments

Avatar
PRSboy | 2 years ago
0 likes

I'd not realised until I read the Shimano manual for my Ultegra 6800 groupset that the indexing/cable tension is supposed to be set on the big ring trim position.

There is an excellent Arts Cyclery 'ask a mechanic' video on YT which demonstrates it very well.

I also like the idea of using the lower limit screw to move the cage before attaching the cable, in order to give a bit of extra tension if you don't have a cable puller.

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check12 | 3 years ago
0 likes
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Sriracha | 3 years ago
1 like

"Turn the barrel adjuster all the way clock wise ..." Clockwise when viewed from which end?

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dreamlx10 | 4 years ago
5 likes

Top tip, clean your bike first

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cdamian | 4 years ago
0 likes

Top tip if you are on Shimano: upgrade your front derailleur to a more recent version.

The new ones come with a build in cable tension adjuster, which you adjust with an allen key. The limit screws also use the same allen key.

I think they are more or less the same between 105 (R7000), Ulregra (R8000) and Dura Ace (R9100). Difference is in price, materials and weight.

https://youtu.be/_rTNjxzUV2o?t=168

Additional advantage for me: the remaining cable doesn't poke either in my leg or the wheel any more.

Now Shimano only has to improve the rear derailleur, because the cable tension adjuster of those ones really does such.

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Woldsman replied to cdamian | 4 years ago
3 likes

cdamian wrote:

Top tip if you are on Shimano: upgrade your front derailleur to a more recent version.

The trouble with that advice for some of us is that it doesn't fit with our preferred (triple) gearing options.  For instance, Shimano's only current triple offering - Tiagra 4703 - is not backward compatible with other 10-speed groupsets.  

So I've had to stockpile my favourite tipple - sorry, triple...

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ChasP replied to cdamian | 4 years ago
0 likes

cdamian wrote:

Top tip if you are on Shimano: upgrade your front derailleur to a more recent version.

The new ones come with a build in cable tension adjuster, which you adjust with an allen key. The limit screws also use the same allen key.

Is it just me that doesn't like the new font mechs? If only they had limit screws instead of the  low and high adjusters on a carrier which effects the position in both the 'limit' and the 'trimmed' position.  This means it's sometimes impossible to stop chain rub when cross chaining, which you are forced to do by the large difference between compact  chainrings. Triples were much better.

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Woldsman replied to ChasP | 4 years ago
1 like

ChasP wrote:

Triples were much better.

I'll drink to that. 

armb wrote:

matthewn5 wrote:

Campag make a neat little tool for setting front mech alignment and height that works really well and saves stuffing around with a ruler:

https://www.tredz.co.uk/.Campagnolo-Front-Mech-Alignment-Tool_121654.htm

Nice, but Shimano's little sticker seems more cost effective, if less reusable.

https://www.slowtwitch.com/articles/images/7/75227-largest_1_FD_sticker.jpg

Also, no mention of adjusting for middle chainring on a triple? I know it's unfashionable, but at least one of the photos is a triple....

You'll find those little stickers on some shop floor bikes, but mostly on new after market mechs, I suppose. 

I've never felt the need for a ruler to measure the gap twixt mech and chain ring - or a cable puller for that matter - and how did we manage in the days of Biopace, oval-ringed, chainsets?  Well, the inner cage was a flat as a flat thing and more modern ones are stepped - "optimised" - and limited to specific gaps between middle and outer chain ring. 

I have one bike that is a pain to index the rear mech, but I can say with hand on heart I've never had a problem with a front mech - double or triple.  Perhaps I've just been fortunate. 

In any case I think it's safe to say I shan't be going over to 1x any time soon...

 

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kil0ran replied to ChasP | 3 years ago
0 likes

Nope, I find them fiddly to set up and out on a ride I'm just going to use a frame stop barrel adjuster, rather than carry the long 2mm hex key. The only advantage is that they're lower profile, which helps with tyre clearance, and a shorter/quicker shift than long arm mechs.

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alan sherman | 4 years ago
4 likes

No mention of use of the cable adjuster to get the cable tension correct so the trim funcitons operate correctly either.  I'm surprised how few people understadn what they are and what they are for.  Grinding away as they pedal.

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matthewn5 | 4 years ago
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Campag make a neat little tool for setting front mech alignment and height that works really well and saves stuffing around with a ruler:

https://www.tredz.co.uk/.Campagnolo-Front-Mech-Alignment-Tool_121654.htm
 

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Woldsman replied to matthewn5 | 4 years ago
2 likes

Justin Loretz wrote:

Tools and materials

•Small Phillips screwdriver
•Cable puller
•Allen keys

... Take care as the heads of the screws are easily damaged - making subsequent adjustments harder...

Certainly for Shimano limit screws the likelihood of damaging the heads is increased by using a Phillips screwdriver.

The Japanese Industrial Standard is said to have been done away with, but if your Japanese derailleur is old enough to have crosshead limit screws rather than diddy hex head screws then the proper tool is worth the investment IMHO. (Park Tool belatedly offers its DSD-2 that supposedly “exceeds the standard” of the Vessel Megadora 900 +2 ‘JIS’ screwdriver pictured below - at around four times the price - for those wishing to colour match with their cable puller.)

 

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armb replied to matthewn5 | 4 years ago
2 likes

matthewn5 wrote:

Campag make a neat little tool for setting front mech alignment and height that works really well and saves stuffing around with a ruler:

https://www.tredz.co.uk/.Campagnolo-Front-Mech-Alignment-Tool_121654.htm

Nice, but Shimano's little sticker seems more cost effective, if less reusable.

https://www.slowtwitch.com/articles/images/7/75227-largest_1_FD_sticker.jpg

Also, no mention of adjusting for middle chainring on a triple? I know it's unfashionable, but at least one of the photos is a triple....

 

Avatar
Cugel replied to armb | 3 years ago
0 likes

As usual. this Road CC how-to skates over the surface of the subject giving only the outline of what can be a more complex process than is described. They also (as another poster mentioned) failed to mention the JIS screwdriver that prevents screw-chew via cam-out of ill-fitting screwdrivers such as a Philips or Posi in a Japanese derailleur adjustment screw.

The failure to mention the ins & outs ('scuse pun) of the trimming mechanism, especially for a triple, is one example of a skate-over-the-surface approach to this article. Another is a failure to mention the need to adjust the extent of the cage throw in various cases, for example when the chainstays are short and the chain gets more bent as a consequence. To elaborate ....

With a triple mech and a shorter chainstay, you will have to have the chain rub the cage outer plate of the cage in small/small as otherwise there will be times when the cage won't push hard enough to drop the chain from middle to inner ring. The trimming mechanism is preciely to deal with this, as it moves the cage a tidge outward to stop the rub , once in small/small.

There are many other such refinement necessary to get a front mech working as it should - especially for triples. (And triples are very useful things, for many reasons, which is why they were used for decades and why many still use them).

Cugel

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matthewn5 replied to armb | 3 years ago
0 likes

That sets the height very nicely, but it doesn't help with the alignment. The Campag tool clips over the big ring and allows a much easier alignment of the outer plate of the cage with the plane of the big ring. Also works for Shimano  3

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