Show us your cleaned drive train
#51
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Over the winter I disassemble the bike and put the parts I can into a ultrasonic cleaner. I ride about 125 miles per week so at least every 2 weeks I use Park degreaser and Simple Green 100% and some that's 10:1 mixed with water.
#52
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@GlennR what ultrasonic cleaner do you use?
@Zaskar good tips about cleaning the bike too. I need to pick up some Park brushes for cleaning my bike. I've been using a shop rags to clean the chain and parts, but the grease is starting to get to be a but much and the wife is worried the grease is going to stay in the washer, thus getting on our clothes.
@Zaskar good tips about cleaning the bike too. I need to pick up some Park brushes for cleaning my bike. I've been using a shop rags to clean the chain and parts, but the grease is starting to get to be a but much and the wife is worried the grease is going to stay in the washer, thus getting on our clothes.
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@GlennR what ultrasonic cleaner do you use?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Multi-Ultra...Frg4Ga6oosKOwQ
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I bought one a few years ago from Walmart before they became popular. My Wally-world one works really well too and I ended up saving some money over the Park tool.
john
john
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The first picture I posted, the bike has over 3000 miles on it (cleaned and maintained after every ride).
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I get it. I used to be like you guys. I didn't care about making a thirty dollar chain last a few extra months. It was all about a clean machine.
Now all I do is re-lube the chain and run a rag over it.
I'm still pretty OCD about squeaks though.
Now all I do is re-lube the chain and run a rag over it.
I'm still pretty OCD about squeaks though.
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#59
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John,
I probably didn't word that correctly. The 1000 mile photo was just to show that if you take care an clean your drive train it can look just as good and clean as new. Didn't mean to imply that it was that clean after a 1000 miles. Not to light this fire but I use Finish Line wax chain lube.
fasthair
I probably didn't word that correctly. The 1000 mile photo was just to show that if you take care an clean your drive train it can look just as good and clean as new. Didn't mean to imply that it was that clean after a 1000 miles. Not to light this fire but I use Finish Line wax chain lube.
fasthair
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John,
I probably didn't word that correctly. The 1000 mile photo was just to show that if you take care an clean your drive train it can look just as good and clean as new. Didn't mean to imply that it was that clean after a 1000 miles. Not to light this fire but I use Finish Line wax chain lube.
fasthair
I probably didn't word that correctly. The 1000 mile photo was just to show that if you take care an clean your drive train it can look just as good and clean as new. Didn't mean to imply that it was that clean after a 1000 miles. Not to light this fire but I use Finish Line wax chain lube.
fasthair

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You have crystallized my thoughts eloquently!
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Wow gents. Very impressed with these clean drive trains and chains. I can only hope to get my chain and drive train that clean. I have some work/learning to do.
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This is my kinda thread. 
I don't have any pictures of my drivetrains specifically, but I have about 5k miles on my road bike, and it looks new. Just got a gravel bike and have already been keeping it just as clean. Once you have a good routine down, it's not hard to keep them clean.
For me it's not about making parts last longer (which can be an added benefit), I hate a noisy drivetrain, and the best way to keep it quiet is to keep it clean.

I don't have any pictures of my drivetrains specifically, but I have about 5k miles on my road bike, and it looks new. Just got a gravel bike and have already been keeping it just as clean. Once you have a good routine down, it's not hard to keep them clean.
For me it's not about making parts last longer (which can be an added benefit), I hate a noisy drivetrain, and the best way to keep it quiet is to keep it clean.

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So I have a question. I found that my car drives better when it's washed, and even better when it's detailed. Do you think a clean drivetrain really makes a difference as compared to simply wiping and oiling the chain periodically?
This is my kinda thread. 
I don't have any pictures of my drivetrains specifically, but I have about 5k miles on my road bike, and it looks new. Just got a gravel bike and have already been keeping it just as clean. Once you have a good routine down, it's not hard to keep them clean.
For me it's not about making parts last longer (which can be an added benefit), I hate a noisy drivetrain, and the best way to keep it quiet is to keep it clean.

I don't have any pictures of my drivetrains specifically, but I have about 5k miles on my road bike, and it looks new. Just got a gravel bike and have already been keeping it just as clean. Once you have a good routine down, it's not hard to keep them clean.
For me it's not about making parts last longer (which can be an added benefit), I hate a noisy drivetrain, and the best way to keep it quiet is to keep it clean.

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After every ride I wipe down the chain/cassette/front rings/jockey wheels (I also wipe down the rest of the bike, but we're only talking drivetrains lol). I add lube probably every other ride (or if it was wet out). If I hear any drivetrain noise during the ride, then the chain gets a full cleaning with the finish line chain cleaner (or any time it looks like there's some gunk building up between the links, even if it's not making noise).
OCD? Absolutely, but it's worth it when all I hear during my ride is the hum of my tires.
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That clean bikes (drive trains) make the bike ride better - faster, more efficient, shift better, etc. - is quantifiable. Lots of "studies" have been done to show the wattage (loss) associated with a dirty chain vs brand X lube vs brand Z lube... Pulleys, cogs, chainrings that are thick with grease, dirt "stick" to the chain. Dirty/worn grease in bearings...
The goal with making a bike faster/ride better is to limit the loss of power we apply - rolling resistance and aero get a lot of press. But, the loss associated friction can be as much as 6% of the power we apply. A new/perfectly clean drive train will (theoretically) top out at 98% efficiency. So, that leaves 4% of waste to wash off ;-)
Last edited by Zaskar; 06-11-19 at 11:27 AM.
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john
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from my OCD days.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.