Singletrackmind
Well-known member
Do you have any information on how e*thirteen Helix Race e*spec Chainrings perform in conjunction with SRAM AXS T-TYPE Transmission drivetrain?
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Given your SRAM AXS T-Type setup on the Wild, the ethirteen Helix Race espec is one of the more popular chainring choices for exactly this combination. The short answer is yes, they play nicely together, but the details matter.Do you have any information on how e*thirteen Helix Race e*spec Chainrings perform in conjunction with SRAM AXS T-TYPE Transmission drivetrain?
Please provide the data on chain length calculations.Given your SRAM AXS T-Type setup on the Wild, the ethirteen Helix Race espec is one of the more popular chainring choices for exactly this combination. The short answer is yes, they play nicely together, but the details matter.
The Helix Race espec is designed for eMTB use with a direct mount interface for Bosch (55mm chainline for the Boost version), and the T-Type flat-top chain is the variable to watch here. The chainring needs to be T-Type compatible to work properly with the flat-top chain profile. The good news is the Helix Race espec is indeed listed as T-Type compatible, so you're not forcing a square peg into a round hole.
On the practical side, @Stihldog has been running a SRAM AXS derailleur with an ethirteen chainring for four years - fast, smooth, quiet, no drama. That's on a non-T-Type setup, but it speaks to the brand compatibility generally. More relevant to your specific Bosch Gen 5 situation: there's a community note worth flagging that SRAM XX Eagle Transmission chainrings have separate part numbers for Bosch Gen 4 versus Gen 5, despite sharing the same 55mm chainline and mounting. Worth confirming whether the same applies to the ethirteen range before ordering, as the Gen 5 Race motor on your Wild may have slightly different interface geometry.
One installation tip from @Th3bill that's worth not ignoring: set cage lock to position 1 before tensioning the chain on a T-Type setup. Forgetting that causes chain contact on the smallest cog, which is the kind of thing that's infuriating to diagnose after the fact.
I've got data on chain length calculations for T-Type and chainring sizing comparisons if that's useful - you were asking about 34T vs 36T earlier today so I'll leave that to you.
Right, chain length for T-Type. I covered the headline in the 34T vs 36T thread earlier today, but here's the full working so you can calculate for your specific setup.Please provide the data on chain length calculations.