RockiMtn":3divtf54 said:
so decided to bring this thread back. i've swapped out with a replacement so now i have beautiful specimen sitting doing nothing, which i find a shame. as stated, not sure if it's just a defective weak spring or sticking pivots.
I may have a go in soaking the whole unit into some lubricant or something. so there's no way of replacing the spring, is there?
Let me prefface this by saying that I don't remember too well these days, so if I have the model numbers wrong, somebody slap me!
Around about the time the bassworm was offered up by Sram as a fix for the Shimano weak spring syndrome (which you are clearly suffering from...(all that cassette stuff is overthinking the issue...sorry pal!
) there were a couple companies who offered a stiffer return spring replacement. The springs were very common retrofits for the 910 and the 739 rear derailleurs of the day. Basically, they turned the new light action derailleurs into one which felt more like the older 900 and 735 stuff.
They are very hard to find, and I wouldn't waste my time if I were you. You could do three things...1)-Use a Bassworm...tey are stupid looking things for sure, but they work. 2)-STI Rapid Fire! Shimano shifters solve all weak spring syndrome issues...99% of the time. or finally...3)-Sell or swap your 910 to a friend locally, with the understanding that you can guarantee for him that the derailleur will work with above mentioned STI, or your money back.
At the shop I worked at in Colorado back in the day, we were good friends with the Sram rep in the region, and so we were heavy into selling Sram stuff, and we worked feverishly to make Grip Shift 500 and the later X-Rays work with Shimano derailleurs. Bassworms, Johnny Snot, replacement springs, we tried it all. I must have swapped out a hundred return springs in those damn derailleurs, and my fingers hurt just thinking about it.
This is all a lesson in Shimano marketing aggression. When 900 and 737 swapped out for 910 and 739, the reason Shimano gave was lighter action and better feel, but the real reason we all discovered, was that the new derailleurs and their limpy springs, worked like ass with Sram twisties. Shimano couldn't stop people from buying competitors shifters by choice, so they figured out how to do it out of need.
If it were me, I'd put it on a shelf or trade it out with a friend for a 900.
Or run Thumbshifters.
If your replacement derailleur is a 910 also, then you are a lucky man. Don't get it dirty! Either that or I'm making all this up in a drunken stupor. I am enjoying a nice Pinot Noir this evening... :shock: