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105 RD Not Dropping Down Cleanly

At the end of my tether with my 5700 rear derailleur on a Cannondale Synapse 5. It shifts up the 11-28 cassette fine on both rings but will not shift down (i.e. to smaller sprocket) cleanly on the large ring. The 14-13-12 sprockets are the worst. Its High/Low limits are correct and has been like this since new. I've replaced the inner cable and the outer at the RD but still it won't index correctly. It hasn't had any prangs so the hanger isn't my first suspect. I'm guessing it's crap routing or rough outer cable ends that are causing too much friction to allow the tension in the RD to release cleanly. Anything else I should be looking at?

If you're new please join in and if you have questions pop them below and the forum regulars will answer as best we can.

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14 comments

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Sanderstorm | 9 years ago
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I was having the same shifting problem with my 105 5700 RD. Kept changing the inners and outers to no effect. Eventually after 20,000 km of dodgy poor timed shifting the internal spring gave up. I was outside a bike shop and bought a new 5701 RD, fitted it on the street and immediately could shift no problems. I guess the internal spring was the problem. New mech is crisp and makes the bike a lot more enjoyable to ride.

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Judge dreadful | 9 years ago
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The 5700 105 setup is notoriously difficult to get right, across both rings, and all sprockets. I changed the 11-25 5700 105 cassette for an 11-28 6700 Ultegra cassette, and kept the FSA chainset. That did make a bigger than expected difference, and although I very rarely use the granny ring, it does seem to shift a lot more cleanly with the Ultegra cassette.

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harman_mogul | 9 years ago
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Well chaps I think this is a case of RTFM! Shimano tech docs are very clear about installing asymmetric chains. (I believe they are now phased out.)

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Swami Dave | 9 years ago
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Yep, totally new one for me too. I had no idea that there was a wrong way to install a Shimano chain.

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Swami Dave | 9 years ago
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SOLVED! Changed all the cables and it still wasn't shifting. Took it in to the excellent Willy Bain in Glasgow and he instantly identified a bent hanger on sight. He attached the tool to demonstrate and it was out by miles. Just shows the value of a great mechanic as it looked OK to me.

I also learned that you can install Shimano chains upside down...

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Jeroen0110 replied to Swami Dave | 9 years ago
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Swami Dave wrote:

I also learned that you can install Shimano chains upside down...

You're kidding me?! Just googled it and apparently the writing needs to be on the outside. What will they think of next?!

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CYCLECRANK | 9 years ago
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I recently had the same problem on 5700, only happened last few outings, was previously slick as shimano can ever be, less than 1000miles on these levers and cables perfect inner and outer and rear, it was similar perhaps not the same issue but hanging on downshifts, and generally messing around.. i know everything was right as i built the machine myself, all from new kit, and then by accident i noticed that the right shifter wasn't returning to the vertical neutral position after a shift, would have probably noticed this sooner but i use on a winter bike a right front brake cross top lever, and rarely brake from the shifter, we are using country roads so not a lot of braking involved either.. the lever could be assisted back to neutral but it affected the way and the quality of the change, sent them back to the supplier under warranty[ 2 years ].. back with me inside 4 days, they say it was dirt and grease, i think its a weak spring, they tested it and said all good... not yet refitted so we'll see what happens over the next month.. warranty runs out june i think..

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Jeroen0110 | 9 years ago
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It could be the rear "loop" ie the section of housing between the RD and the frame is too short. This causes too much tension. It should be a generous semi circle and then some. Perhaps post a pic?

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Davidn37 | 9 years ago
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I had something similar on Ultegra. In the end my bike shop took off the rubber nipple on the end of the final outer leading to the RD as it was working itself inside out and stopping the cable running smoothly. No problems since but you need to put some grease on to stop water getting in.

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Swami Dave | 9 years ago
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Many thanks - will try these this weekend and report back.

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joemmo | 9 years ago
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Almost certain to be cable related. Try removing the inner then threading it back through from the lever, the amount of resistance you feel can be a good indicator of where the cable is sticky. The cable under the bar tape can have tight bends depending on the bar shape and how it's been routed so you may need to wind the tape back and replace that.

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mike the bike replied to joemmo | 9 years ago
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joemmo wrote:

Almost certain to be cable related.......

I'm with you Joe. As the rear section has already been replaced, my first priority would be to replace the front section of the outer cable as well, using genuine Shimano bits. Merlin sells a one-metre length for about £3, which is very considerate of them.

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2 Wheeled Idiot | 9 years ago
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I've had this issue a few times on my bike, clean and oil (or replace) all the cables between shifter and derailleur.
Also check that there's nothing actually inside the shifter barrels-a bit of twig or grit, just to make there isn't something physically blocking the shift from happening.

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kwi | 9 years ago
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How old is the chain and cassette? How old are the cables? Are the pivot points free and easy moving? Is the FD correctly aligned? And while RD alignment being out normally affects the lower gears (Bigger sprockets.) a quick check of that wouldn't go amiss.

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