Originally Posted by
cyccommute
I’m not the one suggesting heating the lubricant at all for any reason. However using a flame on the chain would have a much more detrimental effect than simply heating the bottle of lubricant. Neither would do much to speed the process of drying.
I'm just going to reply to this paragraph because this all just got tiresome again. Like always, you only have your beliefs and no amount of proof, facts or expert opinions is going to change them.
You disregard the obvious to fit a single thing pulled out of context to fit your narrative. Here you state that heating the chain would have a detrimental effect while in other waxing topics you've gone on about how difficult it is to overheat wax. The flame stays on one link for a second or two. That's obvious and not enough heat to be detrimental.
Also, just because, I tested adding a fresh coat of water emulsion wax on a chain and then grilling it a bit. It takes a little longer but it cuts down the drying time from 24 hours to a couple of minutes. Not something that's really necessary but it still works. Chain became stiff, wax hardened. But of course since this teat wasn't done by an independent organization following impossible protocols, it is of no value or merit and therefore none of the findings can be true.