Last week the bike rolled beyond 7k miles in my ownership, its reward being the annual post-winter wash.
A welcome process at the time, as pretty much the only constructive thing I could manage that didn't involve attempting to use my brain, this saw the bike on the stand, wheels off, half it's mass of mud scrubbed from the insides of the guards...
Three buckets of soapy water and an assortment of brushers later it was rinsed with tap and then distilled water (free from the homestead's crap condenser drier), towelled-off and reassembled; with a bit of buggering about with the brakes.
In the past year since I moved the bike has seen an unprecedented amount of use (about 4600 miles) and taken a bit of a hammering throughout the winter. This is now my highest-mileage bike and as such provides an insight into maintenance requirements and component life.
Generally the bike's held up well, if showing some inevitable cosmetic wear and damage in places.
At a little under 5k miles of service the texture has worn off the brake hoods in places and their rear edges are a bit frilly; although I've so far managed to keep the levers and plastic bodies largely free of the scrapes and other typical damage.
Despite being a bit tatty and torn when I got the bike four-ish years and 7k miles ago, the bar tape has proven remarkably resileant and comfortable. It's also taken on a nice sheen / patina in areas of contact from the Vaseline usually present on my hands..
The front brakes have had one pair of replacement pads; Lifeline items which IIRC cost me about 70p in the great
Chain Reaction corpse-picking of 2024. These have given little cause for complaint other than being a bit of a tight fit in the carriers.
Less obviously I've swapped the pairs of concave / convex washers on the pad carriers inside-to-outside, to place the deeper sets on the inside. This has put the brake arms in a more outboard, upright position; meaning the pads act in a direction more perpendicular to the rim rather than having an obvious donward component that caused a migrating contact patch on the rim and disproportionate pad wear at their top.
The more outboard position of the arms does mean the brake cable is a bit shorter than ideal but this doesn't affect operation.
The original minimal cable boot / gaitor on the front noodle has long-since died; I keep looking for replacements but they're all much of a muchness and the bike's noodles seem to have a fairly unique bayonet-shaped end that probably wouldn't play well with the boots on offer.
Maybe I'll fit new noodles and gaitor at some point.
I still hate setting up V-brakes..
The rear brakes have had similar treatment to the fronts, although I think both the spacing between the brake bosses on the frame and (replacement Sputnik) rim width differ from the front, so the setup may not work as well. The rear pads have already been replaced once with Lifeline efforts, which are now near the end of their lives at about 5k miles.
Despite the cracks that appeared in its sidewalls soon after fitment, the £17ish Schwalbe Delter Cruiser tyre on the rear has given great service. This tyre apparently wore through around half of it's 1.7mm tread depth over about 5k miles on the front, and has now covered a further 1k miles or so on the rear. I expect another 1-2k miles out of it before it needs replacing - at which time the newer example from the front will be rotated onto the rear.
In the 6k miles the tyre has covered it's had three legit punctures - apparently two thorns and a piece of glass. This compares reasonably favourably with the previous Vera Citywide original-fitment tyres, which suffered six legit punctures over a total of about 6k miles across both; although I'm not sure if this difference is significant or just the result of random luck.
Also, the Veras were of course already part worn when I got the bike and I was otherwise impressed by their longevity; even if the last one expired through catastrophic failure of the sidewall rather than treadwear.
The wheels remain mercifully true despite the appalling state of the roads around here, the bearings still buttery smooth from the last time they were stripped, cleaned and regreased - whenever I did that. Unsurprisingly the rims show a bit of wear on the braking surface, but this doesn't appear excessive currently. I probably ought to wash the bike more (esp. in the winter) however it's not fun at the best of times given my limted facilities; let alone when it's freezing outside.
After 7k miles the mudguards are looking a little battered through toe-strikes on the front and kerbs interfering with the very low mudflap, but remain presentable and continue to perform very well. While certainly not "clean" after many winter miles the bike would doubtless have been so much worse were it not for the coverage of the excellent Longboards; which SKS have now discontinued. Dickheads.
I have noticed a little corrosion around the ally rivets that retain the stay brackets to the guards themselves and have heard of these being a known failure point; so I probably ought to try and do something about this.
The pannier bags show an amount of light cosmetic damage but continue to funtion perfectly; as well as continuing to wear through the rack as I've still not sorted out any appropriate protection. The abrasion's not made it all the way through the tube wall yet; however it's doubtless only a matter of time.
The relatively recent M592 derailleur continues to give good service after about 3.5k miles, if remaining an irritatingly unnecessary expense since I found the floating jockey wheels on the original were evidently responsible for the ghost shifting.
The non-floating, ball-raced Ultegra / GRX jocket wheels fitted to the current RD in replacement for the floating ones remain perfectly smooth, the tiny amount of fouling between the edge of the cage and the lower wheel having long-since disappeared after some use allowed the cage to cut a little relief in the plastic wheel.
The cassette is still original and shows an amount of plastic deformation at the tips of the smaller sprockets consistent with chain elongation. Inevitable, but no doubt exacerbated by my previous habit of almost exclusive use of the 36t middle ring on the front. There is also some lightish surface corrosion on some non-wear surfaces of the sprockets thanks to my preference for chain wax. Maybe I'll waxoyl the whole cassette when I fit a replacement..
Moving to the front of the drivetrain - of which I have no pictures - the corrosion present on the inside of the M590 crankset's axle when I got it shows no signs of worsening after being treated with phophoric acid and waxoyl. The paint on the outer faces of both crank arms has worn through in places through repeated contact with my shoes and trousers.
The chainrings all remain original and I've made a concerted effort to use the 48t outer ring as much as possible / when appropriate to better spread the wear across this and the middle 36t ring, as well as across the sprockets on the cassette versus leaving it in the middle ring nearly all of the time as I was previously.
Now it's used like a close-ratio double with a bail-out granny gear - the gap between the top and middle rings being equivalent to about two sprockets on the rear. As such, if well-timed there's no need to shift on the rear to compensate when shifting the front - unlike typical wide-range doubles where the difference is usually more like three sprockets on the back so shifting just the front often changes the ratios more than is ideal.
I'm on a new pair of chains after the part-worn original and it's new accomplice wore out. These were both 9sp (KMC X9s) while their replacements are 11sp in the hope that their likely higher material spec will help them last longer, as well as reduced inventory.
Riding with these chains has mostly been fine but not without the odd incident - namely (over about 2k miles) three occasions where the drivetrain has locked up following a shift (usually shifting to the big ring on the front whilst on a large sprocket at the back, resulting in the chain skipping off the jockey wheel,hitting the RD's cage and locking between the two) and a few dropped chains during shifts on the front.
I can't say for certain whether this is exclusively the fault of the thinner chains since the change to these corresponded with my resolution to use the outer chainring more; resulting in a lot more shifts on the front. It's possible that some of these faults (such as the dropped chains) could be linked to the thinner chains but potentially avoidable through FD adjustment, while the other failure happened whilst attempting to run the gears in a sub-optimal combination.
So that I can differentiate between the two KMC X11 chains I'm rotating on the bike, one is silver and grey, the other all grey. The silver (nickel?) finish on the outer links of the former seems to be significantly more prone to corrosion than whatever the grey finish is (some sort of passivate?). As such I'll stick to the fully grey ones in future, but will have to find some additional way of differentiating between them.
Finally the frame requires a bit of attention - showing yet more paint wear adjacent to the tyre inside the chainstays (presumably due to mud etc caught in shear between the two). There's also an area of cable rub on the headtube to sort out, while the paint on the NDS chainstay / seatstay / fork have taken a bit of a beating from contact with bike stands; although thankfully it's not gone through the paint.
I need to touch these areas up but the paint's dried out so needs thinning; while after application it should really be flatted back so that I can apply frame tape over the top.
Hopefully now everything that needed replacing for reasons other than wear has been, and I'm down to just maintaining the bike with consumables. I have a good idea of how long bits will last and have a good stock of spares; although if things finally pan out with a more city-friendly replacement for the Fuji (and it goes into retirement at the homestead) I'm not sure how much I'll need these..
