I can't help but wonder if the derailler wasn't a bit out of parallel? 
Michael

On Friday, September 4, 2015 at 7:27:48 PM UTC-4, David Person wrote:
>
> Normally, when I set up a front derailleur I follow Shimano's 
> recommendation about having 1-2mm of clearance between the large chainring 
> and the derailleur cage.  This has always worked will for me, resulting in 
> crisp shifting.  Since building up my Sam Hillborne back in June I've been 
> running the CX-70 derailleur at this height but find I have to constantly 
> trim the derailleur to keep it from rubbing the chain.  At this setting I 
> can only get a few shifts on the rear before having to adjust the front. 
>  Quite annoying.  I primarily use the large chainring, doing most all the 
> shifting on the rear, so having to constantly trim the front was getting 
> old quickly.  Another issue was that there was little room for adjustment 
> between the inside of the cage rubbing and the outside of the cage rubbing. 
>  I notice that I didn't have the same problem when on the small chainring. 
>  Then I noticed that the front of the cage is a lot narrower than the back, 
> and when on the large chain ring the chain is positioned between the cage 
> near the front, while the chain ride between the cage more toward that 
> middle to rear when on the small chainring.  So that got me thinking that 
> perhaps raising the derailleur up a bit would give me more clearance 
> between the sides of the cage when in the large chainring, with affecting 
> the shifting too badly.  So today I raised the derailleur to that there is 
> 7mm of space between the large chainring and the cage.  I'm happy to report 
> that this has made a huge difference in my enjoyment of riding the bike.  I 
> can shift 5-6 cogs on the back before I have to touch the front shifter to 
> trim the derailleur.  And when I drop the front down to the small 
> chainring, with the chain on the rear cluster anywhere from the middle to 
> the largest cog, there is no need to readjust the front to keep the chain 
> from rubbing the cage.  Pure heaven.  And the shifting performance has not 
> suffered either.  Now granted, I don't ride this bike in a peloton of 
> riders, inches of the wheel in front of me, where every shift is critical, 
> but I've not noticed a decrease in the crispness of the front shifts.
>
> Thought I'd put this out there in the event anyone else was suffering with 
> the same issue.
>
> David
>

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