#31
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For the waxing crew - what is the recipe? Canning paraffin and what else in the crock pot?
Thanks. |
#32
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NSF is good stuff but found on our local rail trail the grit stuck to the chain awful, waxing solved that problem. Both have their advantages
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#33
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Quote:
That's it....
__________________
2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#34
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I've been waxing my chains for 3 years now.
Started with a second hand crock pot and canning parafin and ptfe powder, I quickly ditched the ptfe. It wasn't worth the cost or effort. Always starting with a new factory shimano dura ace chain. I cleaned them using a acetone and mineral spirits until there was no residue after wiping with a micro fiber cloth. Results were great and the only downside was the decreasing process. This year I bought a silca hot pot and their strip chip product. A bag of super secret blend wax and a bottle of drip wax. Results are much better. Next time I buy a bag of wax, I'm going to use their decreasing liquid instead of strip chip. Reason for this is because you can only strip 6 chains for a bag of wax vs 16+ for the bottle of stripper. Using the silca hot pot means the wax is melted at the correct temps now so there is no chance of burning and ruining the wax. Drip wax is for weekly applications as needed with 2 chains being rotated monthly with about 800 to 1000km of use per chain. Excluding the hot pot cost. I'll spend $80 to $100CAD to maintain 6 chains for 2 seasons of training and racing with about 30,000 km ridden. Using dry and wet lubes and cleaning and re lubing chains would have cost me about the same, excwpt now I have no grease stained socks. Last edited by Permanent socks; 04-24-2024 at 07:43 PM. |
#35
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Is this science behind the Silca stuff?
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Crust Malocchio, Turbo Creo |
#36
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Quote:
Watch this and enjoy the clean quiet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHr9znwpwmQ |
#37
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I waxed eight chains yesterday
Three were new 11s XX1 SRAM chains, which I've had great durability from on my MTB and were on sale at Planet Cyclery's GOOB sale. The other five were on the five bikes I ride the most. The KMC chain on the Bingham is the original chain I started with on the Strong. It has over 7,000 miles on it and has always been waxed. I hung it and still can hardly measure wear on that chain, at most it's 1/16th inch in over 3 feet of chain. I wanted fresh wax on the Supersix chain even though it has 500 miles, since I'm taking it on my VA trip soon, so I just decided to pull the chains off the Habanero, Litespeed, and Bob Jackson also. All of these chains are well below the 0.5% wear limit measured with the Park Tool and the Pedro's chain checkers. I used the Silca Stripper solution on the new chains, and boiling water on the old chains (and the new ones after the Stripper) and then dried them in the toaster oven. Then one at a time into the crockpot with the Silca wax. As much as possible, I wiped them down quickly and put them back on the bike and gave each chain a good spin to make sure they weren't sticky from the wax. The new chains, which were going back into the drawer, got worked over a pipe when they'd cooled to loosen them up. As others have said, what's most noticeable is how clean the chainrings, cassette cogs, and especially the jockey wheels are from using wax. No crud. Even though this wax session took some time, I'd rather do this type of maintenance than what I used to do, cleaning all the drivetrain bits. YMMV (your maintenance may vary).
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 Last edited by NHAero; 05-01-2024 at 03:41 PM. |
#38
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I’m considering joining the club but I have a question about chain removal. If I recall correctly, Shimano and SRAM quicklinks aren’t reusable. Do you reuse anyway and, if so, how do you know when it’s no longer safe? Or do you have another approach?
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#39
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So, when measuring for wear, are waxed chains giving a false reading since the wax is filling the void? I’ve had this in the back of my head but always forget to check during an in between chain cleaning. Just curious.
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#40
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I use Shimano chains and I reuse the Shimano quick links for a fair number of uses. When they get too easy to snap together, it's time to chuck them.
__________________
"Progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." - Robert Heinlein |
#41
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Amazing really. Onyx hub, no front der, waxed chain - unreal how quiet it is. Highly recommend. |
#42
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Just tried the UFO Drip Ceramic Speed. Damn is it wonderful...... Even on my track bikes - talk about silent!
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#43
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I just order extra quick links, and reuse each one 2 or 3 times.
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#44
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I caved and bought the Silca wax pot and Stripchips 2 weeks ago. I've now done 3 new chains and 3 re-waxes and it literally couldn't be any easier. I love the whole simplified process. |
#45
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My chains are mostly KMC or SRAM. As others have said, I re-use, but pay attention to the "click" when re-assembling and replace if it feels mushy.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
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