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• #602
I mostly only waxed chains for cleanliness compared to oils so.. fuck that.
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• #603
Molybdenum probably. Used in robotics as a lubricant, not good for the environment.
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• #604
I'm pleased you mention this because I have been in a spiral of doubt about my waxing ability because after a few wet rides it feels like I need to re-wax when I thought wax was supposed to last forever: ok, can see I might have been slightly optimistic!
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• #605
not good for the environment
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• #606
Molybdenum disulphide is a layered solid lubricant with better lubricity than graphite.
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• #607
Probably insufficient but https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1521/ML15212A086.pdf
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• #608
Probably insufficient
Yes, because that's all about bioavailable molybdenum, usually in the form of molybdates. The solid lubricant molybdenum (IV) sulphide is quite stable, and insoluble in water, making it hard for the molybdenum to have any biological interaction. Oxidation of fine powder does occur in ambient air, forming bioavailable Mo(V,VI) species, but also necessarily inorganic sulphate which mitigates the potential harm.
If I have to choose something to lose off my chain into the environment, I'll take MoS2 over micro-divided PTFE any day.
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• #609
I haven't got the energy to read the whole thread, so can anyone recommend a wax regime for a lazy person who doesn't compete?
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• #610
Buy a new chain and a big bottle of Squirt, degrease the chain, apply the squirt. Reapply squirt according to use.
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• #611
Seconded, this is my approach, works well. Reminder that for waxed chains, boiling water is an effective "degreaser"
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• #612
Degreaser
Hot pot + wax, repeat
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• #613
Finally got another slow cooker...as I'm not paying for one...now I can't my wax. So cheapest source of wax.
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• #614
Are you starting with all new chain and sprockets?
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• #615
With a freshly submersion waxed chain, what is the approved post 2h sloppy-mud ride protocol?
Wash and keep riding for usual distance interval before rewaxing? Or full submersion if the ride gets messy?
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• #616
I'd probably hot water rinse it and re-wax, but depends how much time you have and how squeaky it is.
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• #617
I washed it with an hot flannel and did one more sloppy ride. Was ok. Basically slop rides halve the distance before rewaxing. YMMV
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• #618
yup. bad, though, when the sloppy ones come back to back
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• #619
Would anyone like a slow cooker for one to use for chain waxing? Doesn't come with a lid but the ceramic pot is intact. The outer has seen better days and the controller at the front is loose...so save enough to use in a garage with me watching
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• #620
OK, getting on to this after putting it off for a few years. Have read quite a bit of the thread and the bikeradar article but head is spinning now.
Have ordered slow cooker, but how big an u/s cleaner do I need to take an 11-42 cassette? (I know I could work it out from looking at all the dimensions, but roughly - does it need to be say 3l , 4l or will 2l do?)
Small ones are ridiculously cheap (<£10) now so may just get one of those for chains if cassette needs a massive one.
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• #621
You might want to check zero friction cycling
I've followed their instructions with success and they don't recommend U/S cleaning. -
• #622
Another here who wouldn't recommend ultrasonic cleaning. Seems like unnecessary cost and faff to me.
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• #623
I like it because you can just throw the stuff in, hit go, do something else. No wanking off jars to worry your neighbours either.
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• #624
Hate to say it, but the Silca chain cleaner is actually magic. Cleans factory grease off in five minutes, one dip. Not magic, it just does what you’ve paid it to do.
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• #625
Have you compared it with CeramicSpeed's cleaner?
Yeah, I was kind of put off when I first saw the process on youtube and saw that black stuff. I'm very happy with pure paraffin immersion even if it means I have to do it weekly at the moment because of the rain.