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When it's time to do a rare major cleaning, the chain goes in an old wide mouth nalgene with Dawn dish soap and boiling water. I wrap an old bath towel around it and shake the hell out of it. The towel is absolutely mandatory for opening the nalgene since it usually spurts like a hot radiator. It takes a couple wash and rinse cycles. Hang to dry before installing and lubing. Nalgene was (and still is) a lab equipment company before it became an outdoor brand; their hard bottles handle boiling water without issues.
There's a theory that this kind of cleaning removes lube from deep inside the chain and that relubing the chain can't penetrate to replace it. I figure if hot water and detergent got in there, then super slippery chain lube probably can too. I over lube and wipe.
The notion that chains need to be really really clean is silly to me given how much work that would take. I run 3 x 6/7/8 speeds, so chains are cheap, and steel is recyclable. I also really like steel chainrings. Old Sugino VP cranks from MTBeaters often have great steel 110/74 BCD rings. What a sensible place to add weight to your bike.
Carl
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| From: mhec...@gmail.com Sent: May 28, 2020 4:18 PM Reply-to: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com Subject: [RBW] Hot Waxing Chains |
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| From: mhec...@gmail.com Sent: May 31, 2020 4:45 AM Reply-to: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com Subject: Re: [RBW] Hot Waxing Chains |
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So.... I bought a bottle of NFS (Nixfrikshun) for my trust Saluki, now dressed up in brandy new TA rings. I followed the instructions to put a drop on 12 links and spin the chain backwards 12 times. There was no sign of any lube on the big ring, so I added 4 more drops and spun 12 times. Still no sign of any lube. Added 4 more drops & spun. No sign of any lube, but this time I lightly rubbed a finger across the chain and could feel just the thinnest film of oil. Went out for an hours ride on dirt roads. The bike ran quietly, or as quietly as tires can roll over loose dirt, shifted flawlessly; certainly no chain squeak. Returning I checked the rings & chain and saw a small amount of lube on the rings. No visible dirt. Wiped the chain and the big ring down.I'm definitely impressed and thanks to Robert Tilley for the suggestion.
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Subject: Re: [RBW] Hot Waxing Chains |
So.... I bought a bottle of NFS (Nixfrikshun) for my trust Saluki, now dressed up in brandy new TA rings. I followed the instructions to put a drop on 12 links and spin the chain backwards 12 times. There was no sign of any lube on the big ring, so I added 4 more drops and spun 12 times. Still no sign of any lube. Added 4 more drops & spun. No sign of any lube, but this time I lightly rubbed a finger across the chain and could feel just the thinnest film of oil. Went out for an hours ride on dirt roads. The bike ran quietly, or as quietly as tires can roll over loose dirt, shifted flawlessly; certainly no chain squeak. Returning I checked the rings & chain and saw a small amount of lube on the rings. No visible dirt. Wiped the chain and the big ring down.I'm definitely impressed and thanks to Robert Tilley for the suggestion.
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Has anyone ever tried cleaning their chain and NEVER applying lube at ALL?This may be an absolutely idiotic question, but there are all kinds of posts all over the web about people who think lube is a scam, but I can't find anyone that has actually tested the theory with a top-quality chain.I've ridden belt drive bikes exclusively for the last 12 years, until I bought an Atlantis recently and my life changed. The one nice thing about belts is you just hose off the bike now and then.Paul
Your experience, appreciated.
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On Aug 5, 2020, at 7:57 PM, 'John Hawrylak' via RBW Owners Bunch <rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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Greetings, one and all. It has been a long time, at least a few years, since my last post and I am just assuming my membership is still active.
At 75+, I still ride regularly, although not the distances I used to. I live in a small town in far northern VT, which has mostly dirt roads. I just ride; I don't desire new stuff nor do anything heroic worth writing about. I have a Rambouillet, a Trek 620, An early Saluki (my goto ride), and a custom Bilenky touring tandem. My wife rides a Betty Foy and my daughter a Cheviot. All but the Trek have fenders but that's still a lot of chains out on dirty roads and a lot of messy time cleaning them.Can you teach an old dog new tricks? Well maybe. I clean the chains, rings and cogs with mineral spirits and citrosol. I use a standard oil lube and wipe them down as best I can. The process of wiping down the chains inevitably contaminates the rings and cogs with oil and the first ride bleeds oil from the inside to the outside of the chain. The oil collects dirt, which wears down rings and cogs. (I just ordered th so I'm focused). Every time I go through this process of cleaning 9 chains, I watch a youtube video on chain waxing but get put off by the initial effort and purchase of a crock pot, ultrasonic cleaner, etc; and wonder if it would really improve this process ; keep the chain cleaner and reduce wear?Your experience, appreciated.Michael
Greetings, one and all. It has been a long time, at least a few years, since my last post and I am just assuming my membership is still active.
At 75+, I still ride regularly, although not the distances I used to. I live in a small town in far northern VT, which has mostly dirt roads. I just ride; I don't desire new stuff nor do anything heroic worth writing about. I have a Ramboulliet, a Trek 620, An early Saluki (my goto ride), and a custom Bilenky touring tandem. My wife rides a Betty Foy and my daughter a Cheviot. All but the Trek have fenders but that's still a lot of chains out on dirty roads and a lot of messy time cleaning them.Can you teach an old dog new tricks? Well maybe. I clean the chains, rings and cogs with mineral spirits and citrosol. I use a standard oil lube and wipe them down as best I can. The process of wiping down the chains inevitably contaminates the rings and cogs with oil and the first ride bleeds oil from the inside to the outside of the chain. The oil collects dirt, which wears down rings and cogs. (I just ordered three new rings today, so I'm focused). Every time I go through this process of cleaning 9 chains, I watch a youtube video on chain waxing but get put off by the initial effort and purchase of a crock pot, ultrasonic cleaner, etc; and wonder if it would really improve this process ; keep the chain cleaner and reduce wear?Your experience, appreciated.Michael