Absolutely correct, Peter, the slinger is clamped by the collar, whatever its length ; the collar that runs in the seal is nothing more than a spacer that transmits the load from the crank-nose bolt, via the damper, onto the succession of parts that abut the crank, including the sprocket.PeterCrespin wrote: ↑Fri Mar 27, 2020 11:26 pmDoesn’t make sense, sorry. The slinger sits against the sprocket no matter what length of spacer you use. So the noise cannot have been a change in distance between chain and a slinger ‘forced’ against it by a different spacer. Maybe you bent the slinger taking the spacer off?
Any racket from the front has therefore nothing to do with the length of the spacer ; it might, however, have a lot to do with something about the collar in question being unable to accomodate the full depth of a key on the crank nose ......... such that the clamping from the nose bolt is not getting as far as clamping the sprocket, and so the rattle is the sprocket chattering on its keys.
Most interesting info, Andrew, about the Teflon bollocks ; if watching the Dark Waters film
https://slate.com/culture/2019/11/dark- ... upont.html
hadn't put you off the stuff already, that tech sheet would certainly make you reach for the Nitrile !
Just off to fry some bacon.




