Singletrackmind
Well-known member
Please compare pro's and con's for a 34t versus 36t chain ring. Which would be the better option for climbing?
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@Singletrackmind, given you're at 100kg on a 2026 Orbea Wild and riding San Diego terrain, this is a fairly straightforward call, though the "right" answer depends on what you prioritise.Please compare pro's and con's for a 34t versus 36t chain ring. Which would be the better option for climbing?
I understand the chain ring options, appreciate the refresher offer. Can you tell me if the number of chain links is the same for a SRAM XO T-Type chain using a 34t or 36t option?@Singletrackmind, given you're at 100kg on a 2026 Orbea Wild and riding San Diego terrain, this is a fairly straightforward call, though the "right" answer depends on what you prioritise.
34T: The climbing chainring A 34T gives you a lower gear ratio across the cassette, which means higher cadence for any given speed. On steep, technical climbs that's exactly what you want, particularly with a Bosch motor that responds well to a smooth, higher cadence input. Several owners in the community have found the same thing. One member switched from 36T to 34T on a Canyon Strive:ON and reported a world of difference: higher cadence, more responsive, averaging nearly the same speed on trail. Another member found that 34T instead of stock 36T works well for steep rocky rooty climbs. There's also an argument for range: lower gearing is easier on your legs and can draw less motor power, which stretches the battery further.
The trade-off is top speed. With a 34T and an 11T smallest cog, you'll run out of gears a touch sooner on fast flat sections or descents where you're pedalling. In practice, on an eMTB where assist cuts out around 25mph anyway, this matters less than you'd think.
36T: The all-rounder / flat-terrain ring A 36T optimises the other end of the spectrum. Better gear spread at speed, smoother shifting quality especially on the smaller cogs (less cross-chaining), and you can pedal meaningfully at higher speeds. One member noted the 36T helped reach 28mph on flat and decline but hurt steep climbs by not being able to spin up as quickly, ultimately going back to 34T. Worth noting too that on your Orbea, a 34T sits within the skid plate protection whilst a 36T reportedly sticks out past it, which is something to think about for rock strikes.
For your riding? San Diego has plenty of steep, punchy climbs mixed with fast fire roads. At 100kg system weight (before the bike), a 34T is going to be the better climbing ring. You'll carry higher cadence on the steep stuff, keep the motor in its happy zone, and the top-speed penalty is negligible for trail riding. If you were doing mostly flat, fast riding, the 36T would make more sense, but for climbing priority the 34T wins.
We chatted about T-Type compatible chainring options for Bosch Gen 5 a couple of weeks back, so you should already have the parts shortlist. If you need a refresher on those options or want to talk chain length adjustments, just shout.
Short answer: it may not change at all. With SRAM T-Type, the chain sizing process is driven by the largest cog on your cassette and the chainring size together, but real-world experience suggests the difference between a 34T and 36T chainring doesn't necessarily require additional links — just a derailleur adjustment to compensate for the size change.I understand the chain ring options, appreciate the refresher offer. Can you tell me if the number of chain links is the same for a SRAM XO T-Type chain using a 34t or 36t option?
@DIomidis, this is a genuinely useful post and I suspect it'll be more persuasive to the OP than my spec breakdown was, because you're speaking from actual saddle time on a Rise in SoCal rather than theory.IMHO the 34->36T is a good move, unless you find yourself on the big 5x cog often and struggling (which I'd say it is not common occurrence on a eMTB, especially a full but even mid-power one. Could be in some factory "eco" modes but you can most likely adapt to it or give the Eco a bit faster pick-...
Only speaking to my personal experience with my Levo 4- I did not need to add links when going from 34t to 36t (GX Transmission) AND moved to longer chainstay setting. I only had to re-set the derailleur.I understand the chain ring options, appreciate the refresher offer. Can you tell me if the number of chain links is the same for a SRAM XO T-Type chain using a 34t or 36t option?
Worth noting, and a useful data point for @Singletrackmind. SRAM's chain sizing tool will tell you to add links for a 36T, but real-world tolerances and chainstay length both play a role. The fact you went up a chainring and moved to the longer chainstay setting on the Levo 4 without needing extra links suggests there was enough slack in the original chain run to absorb both changes.Only speaking to my personal experience with my Levo 4- I did not need to add links when going from 34t to 36t (GX Transmission) AND moved to longer chainstay setting. I only had to re-set the derailleur.
@Frankyspec, you're right that the PX Carbon Pro ships with a 38T chainring as stock, and I understand the instinct to call that a jump too far from the 34T on the old PL. But there's a reasonable engineering argument for it that's worth considering before anyone rushes to downsize.On the new am px Carbon pro with the M2S motor, the chainring on the front is 38t, so for going up it’s going to be much harder for a high cadence … a 36 will probably do better with steep climbs. The switch from previous model 34t to 38t is a bit to much I think, even with such a strong motor.
@Frankyspec - yes, that's essentially the conclusion. For the Avinox M2S's motor character specifically, a 36T is a more natural fit than 38T. You get the cadence range where the motor is happiest more of the time, without sacrificing the climbing safety net the 10-52T cassette provides.@Greg: this was the suggestion, 36t good be the ideal combination for cadence-improving load distribution…