If you think for a moment that you well ever submit a chain to the kind of stress that it was designed for, and I'm talking about industrial roller chain, with the forces available from a motorized bicycle, you have another think coming.
"Pre-Stretched" ??? I've never seen this term applied to any roller chain from any manufacturer. "Pre-Stressed". Possibly, and the forces used are far more than you'll ever see in our applications.
As I've said, the kit supplied chains, typically #415 chains have some limitations and short-comings when compared with a chain manufactured by Morse, Browning, or any of several other American made industrial roller chains.
I'll stand by my original statement. Roller chains do not "stretch", they wear.
Personally I have a number of kit chains stored under my work bench because I don't use them. I install a good quality #41 industrial roller chain on all of my builds. I never experience chain problems associated with some of the kit chain. And contrary to what I've seen posted here, #415 and #41 are not compatible in terms of master or half links. The pin sizes are different which does not allow matching one to the other.
Tom
"Pre-Stretched" ??? I've never seen this term applied to any roller chain from any manufacturer. "Pre-Stressed". Possibly, and the forces used are far more than you'll ever see in our applications.
As I've said, the kit supplied chains, typically #415 chains have some limitations and short-comings when compared with a chain manufactured by Morse, Browning, or any of several other American made industrial roller chains.
I'll stand by my original statement. Roller chains do not "stretch", they wear.
Personally I have a number of kit chains stored under my work bench because I don't use them. I install a good quality #41 industrial roller chain on all of my builds. I never experience chain problems associated with some of the kit chain. And contrary to what I've seen posted here, #415 and #41 are not compatible in terms of master or half links. The pin sizes are different which does not allow matching one to the other.
Tom