Chain Lube
#12
#14
Chain Lube
Originally posted by: drac1
ive raced dirt bikes for four years and pj1 blue lable is very good .and as for wd40 its a good cleaner .wd 40 stands for water disperment and the 40 stands for the 40th chemicle they put in it later dave
ive raced dirt bikes for four years and pj1 blue lable is very good .and as for wd40 its a good cleaner .wd 40 stands for water disperment and the 40 stands for the 40th chemicle they put in it later dave
#16
Chain Lube
Guys, from a chemist's standpoint, WD40 is the worst thing you can apply to a rubber o-ring. WD40, as stated above, is a water dispersement chemical. Rubber has to maintain a certain moisture saturation in order to remain pliable. Since WD40 is more hydrophilic than the rubber, it will remove the moisture from the o-ring and cause premature breakage. (Kind of like what happens to a rubber band if left out in the sun. The bottom line is, if your using an o-ring chain, spend a little money and buy the o-ring safe chain lube. It will pay off in the end. I like bel-ray because it doesn't seem to pick up as much sand but PJ1 and several others are fine as well. If you are trying to clean the old lube off while washing, saturate it with some degreaser and let it stand for a bit. It might take a little longer, but its time well invested to save your chain.
~HoundDog
#17
Chain Lube
Originally posted by: HoundDog06
Guys, from a chemist's standpoint, WD40 is the worst thing you can apply to a rubber o-ring. WD40, as stated above, is a water dispersement chemical. Rubber has to maintain a certain moisture saturation in order to remain pliable. Since WD40 is more hydrophilic than the rubber, it will remove the moisture from the o-ring and cause premature breakage. (Kind of like what happens to a rubber band if left out in the sun. The bottom line is, if your using an o-ring chain, spend a little money and buy the o-ring safe chain lube. It will pay off in the end. I like bel-ray because it doesn't seem to pick up as much sand but PJ1 and several others are fine as well. If you are trying to clean the old lube off while washing, saturate it with some degreaser and let it stand for a bit. It might take a little longer, but its time well invested to save your chain.
~HoundDog
Guys, from a chemist's standpoint, WD40 is the worst thing you can apply to a rubber o-ring. WD40, as stated above, is a water dispersement chemical. Rubber has to maintain a certain moisture saturation in order to remain pliable. Since WD40 is more hydrophilic than the rubber, it will remove the moisture from the o-ring and cause premature breakage. (Kind of like what happens to a rubber band if left out in the sun. The bottom line is, if your using an o-ring chain, spend a little money and buy the o-ring safe chain lube. It will pay off in the end. I like bel-ray because it doesn't seem to pick up as much sand but PJ1 and several others are fine as well. If you are trying to clean the old lube off while washing, saturate it with some degreaser and let it stand for a bit. It might take a little longer, but its time well invested to save your chain.
~HoundDog
Thanks, MWQ.
#19
Chain Lube
There aren't many ways to remove the water without damaging the o-rings and no, you don't want to lube the chain while wet. I would simply let the bike set for a bit after washing to air dry. You could use pressurized air to blow the chain off if your in that much of a hurry or if its the end of the day for you, just put the bike up and lube it before the next ride. There will be enough residual lube residue to allow you to drive it into the garage or wherever you store it, just don't ride it hard until you have relubed the chain.
~HoundDog
~HoundDog
#20
Chain Lube
Originally posted by: ifly61ce
Thanks for all the tips!
I bought some Maxxis chain wax that the dealer had, and it says to ride for 5 minutes before applying, maybe that is to remove any water.
Mark
Thanks for all the tips!
I bought some Maxxis chain wax that the dealer had, and it says to ride for 5 minutes before applying, maybe that is to remove any water.
Mark