Michael: I find that waxing leaves the chain clean so that it doesn't attract dirt. Even riding off-road it can be simply wiped down. However, I've also done some touring in wet climates & need to take along a conventional chain lube as the wax doesn't hold up well in a wet climate. It is a hassle to go thru the process, and 9 chains would take a lot of time. My wife & I only one bike each to doing a few times a year is not a big chore for me. Some time ago, she picked up a fondue pot at a garage sale or something, cheap, and it's perfect for one chain at a time. I just use ordinary canning wax (paraffin?), nothing biking specific.
I understand there are also liquid wax chain products but have never tried them. It may be an option for you to consider. dougP On Thursday, May 28, 2020 at 4:18:22 PM UTC-7, Michael Hechmer wrote: > > 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 > > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/81ced46a-9341-400e-b038-2006040c4b1a%40googlegroups.com.
