gavroche
Getting old but not past it
- Location
- North Wales
I read somewhere that dipping your chain in melted wax is a very efficient way of keeping it clean and in good condition, apparently better than using oil. Has anyone heard of that method?
Not sure if you can buy it for home use, but when you get a brand new chain it appears to be coated in a great wax like substance that lasts for a while before you need to start oiling.I read somewhere that dipping your chain in melted wax is a very efficient way of keeping it clean and in good condition, apparently better than using oil. Has anyone heard of that method?
Used to do similar with heavy grease, heat it until fluid, leave chain in for a while to allow the grease to get into the rollers, remove, hang and wipe.Back in the day, we used to heat what Americans call paraffin wax in a double boiler(no direct flame) and use that on chains. It is a petroleum wax, sold as GulfWax for canning. It is a byproduct of oil production. Look in home canning supplies. We used to put the liquified wax in an old can, and dunk the chain in it several times. The wax came off where it wasn't needed, and stayed put where it was needed.(within the links) You can then save the remaining wax for the next time. No video games, no smart phones, etc. Gave us something to do. That and talk directly to one another. Very low tech.
Been using that for 6 months. Great lube in fairness. The best balance of Dry and Wet lube all rolled into one.I read that sky were doing it , they have now "developed " a chain wax
http://road.cc/content/news/127798-muc-launch-c4-wax-chain-lube-developed-team-sky-video
Used to be ok 'till they developed O ring chains - now it's just spray on chain grease. Does the job on a cycle chain but it really is filthy stuffI used to use this method on motorbike chains. Worked well, probably because it didn't get thrown off easily. I think anti throwing off grease has since been developed and nowadays I just use motorbike spray chain grease on my pedal bike.