Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Road Cycling
Reload this Page >

drip wax longevity

Notices
Road Cycling “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” -- Ernest Hemingway
View Poll Results: how long does an application of drip wax last you?
<100km
2
5.26%
101-200km
6
15.79%
201-300km
13
34.21%
301+km
5
13.16%
don’t use it, feel like voting anyway.
12
31.58%
Voters: 38. You may not vote on this poll

drip wax longevity

Old 01-31-23, 07:24 PM
  #51  
Tusk
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Posts: 96

Bikes: 1986 Scwinn Prelude 20?? Motobecane Ti 'Le Champion"

Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 54 Post(s)
Liked 53 Times in 35 Posts
Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
how often do you take them off for the cleaning? i basically never take it off between replacements, maybe i’m just not getting it clean enough.
the conditions of most of my rides *seem* benign but there’s definitely coastal fog (which may be salty?) and a little wind blown sand.
heavy fog maybe 1/3 of the time through here, with correspondingly wet ground in the AM
Never mind. My conditions are nowhere near as tough as yours. I just have a lot of san on the road, which is weird, given the amount of rain we get every year.
I pull the chain two or three times per year. Not that often.
Tusk is offline  
Old 01-31-23, 08:35 PM
  #52  
sean.hwy
Senior Member
 
sean.hwy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2020
Location: San Jose
Posts: 939

Bikes: Blur / Ibis Hakka MX

Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 388 Post(s)
Liked 250 Times in 183 Posts
Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
how often do you take them off for the cleaning? i basically never take it off between replacements, maybe i’m just not getting it clean enough.

the conditions of most of my rides *seem* benign but there’s definitely coastal fog (which may be salty?) and a little wind blown sand.

looks benign!


but covered with sand 1/2 the time



heavy fog maybe 1/3 of the time through here, with correspondingly wet ground in the AM
Looks like a nice turn out in SF. I have only ridden that section at night.





I take my chain off every time for cleaning. I soak in mineral spirits for several days and put it in at least two jar. Then scrub it/wipe it down on 4x4. Hang it up to dry for several days before applying chain lube the night before a ride. I don't think the lube works as well if there is still mineral spirits between the pins. I rotate between several chains.

When I first started riding I used one of those automated cleaners like a few people have posted. I didn't give it much thought back then. I don't think that cleans inside the pins very well and then if you just put lube on semi wet chain with cleaner on it the lube does not go and stay like it should. No mater how much you dry your chain on the bike with towel etc.. the insides pins still going to be wet. Your lube is going to be diluted and probably not stay on as well.



Pre puppy ( sept, been hiking more with the dog ) I was riding about 500 to 700 miles a month and would rotate/clean/lube my chain once a week. I guess that's roughly 200km +
sean.hwy is online now  
Old 02-01-23, 06:51 AM
  #53  
eduskator
Senior Member
 
eduskator's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Québec, Canada
Posts: 1,455

Bikes: Propel Pro, TCR Pro, TCR Adv (beater)

Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 626 Post(s)
Liked 369 Times in 283 Posts
Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
how often do you take them off for the cleaning? I basically never take it off between replacements, maybe i’m just not getting it clean enough.

the conditions of most of my rides *seem* benign but there’s definitely coastal fog (which may be salty?) and a little wind blown sand.

looks benign!


but covered with sand 1/2 the time



heavy fog maybe 1/3 of the time through here, with correspondingly wet ground in the AM
Try it next time. You'll see - it does make a difference to deep clean it every once in a while. I soak mine in fuel overnight every 1000miles or so, then in hot soapy water. Your environment seems harsher than me so more maintenance is clearly needed in order to get maximum lifespan (if that's what you're looking for).
eduskator is offline  
Old 02-01-23, 02:01 PM
  #54  
SoSmellyAir
Method to My Madness
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 2,621

Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1330 Post(s)
Liked 918 Times in 668 Posts
mschwett is either churning out megawatts or riding in extreme environments: is this cassette toast? - Bike Forums

Is your chain tacky (i.e., mildly adhesive) or greasy to the touch? Minimizing the accumulation of fine sand would increase drivetrain longevity.
SoSmellyAir is offline  
Old 02-01-23, 02:31 PM
  #55  
mschwett 
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 1,572

Bikes: aethos, creo, vanmoof, public ...

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 930 Post(s)
Liked 1,035 Times in 552 Posts
Originally Posted by SoSmellyAir View Post
mschwett is either churning out megawatts or riding in extreme environments: is this cassette toast? - Bike Forums

Is your chain tacky (i.e., mildly adhesive) or greasy to the touch? Minimizing the accumulation of fine sand would increase drivetrain longevity.
unfortunately, no megawatts. i average 200-210 watts over a longish ride, normalized power typically around 220, peak 1000 but not for any meaningful amount of time. 200lb total weight of rider plus bike.

chain feels smooth to the touch, leaves a bit of grey/black grime on rag or fingers after a ride, but looks very clean and sounds good.


__________________
mschwett is offline  
Old 02-01-23, 04:11 PM
  #56  
SoSmellyAir
Method to My Madness
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 2,621

Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1330 Post(s)
Liked 918 Times in 668 Posts
Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
unfortunately, no megawatts. i average 200-210 watts over a longish ride, normalized power typically around 220, peak 1000 but not for any meaningful amount of time. 200lb total weight of rider plus bike.
Kilowatt! Got my metric prefixes wrong while typing in a hurry.

Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
chain feels smooth to the touch, leaves a bit of grey/black grime on rag or fingers after a ride, but looks very clean and sounds good.
The used chain at the top looks very clean on the outside for a chain that does not come off the bike for cleaning, but the interfaces between the inner chain plates and the rollers are more critical for chain and drivetrain wear.
SoSmellyAir is offline  
Old 02-02-23, 10:42 AM
  #57  
mschwett 
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 1,572

Bikes: aethos, creo, vanmoof, public ...

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 930 Post(s)
Liked 1,035 Times in 552 Posts
Originally Posted by SoSmellyAir View Post
Kilowatt! Got my metric prefixes wrong while typing in a hurry.



The used chain at the top looks very clean on the outside for a chain that does not come off the bike for cleaning, but the interfaces between the inner chain plates and the rollers are more critical for chain and drivetrain wear.
i’m guessing my casual chain cleaning routine does a good job on the outside and hardly touches the inside, which of course is the part that contacts the cogs. :facepalm:
__________________
mschwett is offline  
Old 02-02-23, 01:33 PM
  #58  
eduskator
Senior Member
 
eduskator's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Québec, Canada
Posts: 1,455

Bikes: Propel Pro, TCR Pro, TCR Adv (beater)

Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 626 Post(s)
Liked 369 Times in 283 Posts
Can't really get to the inside unless it's submerged and shaken in a liquid (fuel does the job - for the fancy people out here, an ultrasonic cleaner also does the job.
eduskator is offline  
Old 02-02-23, 04:39 PM
  #59  
SoSmellyAir
Method to My Madness
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 2,621

Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1330 Post(s)
Liked 918 Times in 668 Posts
Originally Posted by eduskator View Post
Can't really get to the inside unless it's submerged and shaken in a liquid (fuel does the job - for the fancy people out here, an ultrasonic cleaner also does the job.
I remove the chain, put it with both quick links in a (clean) wide mouth pasta sauce jar with OMS, shut the lid tight, shake it for a minute, and let it soak overnight. If we are doing laundry on that day, I leave the jar on top of the laundry machine for one wash cycle (for the extra agitation). Then I transfer the chain and both quick links to another (clean) wide mouth pasta sauce jar with OMS, shut the lid tight, shake it for a minute, and let it soak for a few hours. The chain comes out spotless, and after hanging to dry for a couple of hours, it goes into the Crock Pot for waxing.

OMS is hard to buy in California, but you can still buy it from an art supply store for 3x what Lowes charges.

Gamblin Gamsol | Oil Mediums | Michaels

I have bought a quart from Michaels and a quart from Lowes.
SoSmellyAir is offline  
Old 02-03-23, 08:20 PM
  #60  
scottfsmith
I like bike
 
scottfsmith's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2021
Location: Merry Land USA
Posts: 623

Bikes: Roubaix Comp 2020

Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 250 Post(s)
Liked 261 Times in 174 Posts
Originally Posted by scottfsmith View Post
Not to long ago I switched to using a Park Tool chain cleaner to apply the lube.. just fill up to the solvent line with lube (and re-use of course). This method extends the longevity based on results so far. It puts a lot more lube on the chain so it is also costing more.
I just found a video from someone else who came up with the same idea. I thought it was my own brilliant idea, ah well.


At around 5:30 he starts lubing the chain. Notice zero splattering. He has a later follow-up video where he expects he can get 3x or so more life from a single lube with this method vs the hand drip-on of Silca SS.
scottfsmith is offline  
Old 02-06-23, 04:36 PM
  #61  
DaveSSS 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Loveland, CO
Posts: 7,045

Bikes: Cinelli superstar disc, two Yoeleo R12

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 971 Post(s)
Liked 509 Times in 410 Posts
Originally Posted by SoSmellyAir View Post
I remove the chain, put it with both quick links in a (clean) wide mouth pasta sauce jar with OMS, shut the lid tight, shake it for a minute, and let it soak overnight. If we are doing laundry on that day, I leave the jar on top of the laundry machine for one wash cycle (for the extra agitation). Then I transfer the chain and both quick links to another (clean) wide mouth pasta sauce jar with OMS, shut the lid tight, shake it for a minute, and let it soak for a few hours. The chain comes out spotless, and after hanging to dry for a couple of hours, it goes into the Crock Pot for waxing.

OMS is hard to buy in California, but you can still buy it from an art supply store for 3x what Lowes charges.

Gamblin Gamsol | Oil Mediums | Michaels

I have bought a quart from Michaels and a quart from Lowes.

No point in long soaks, agitation is what's needed. See if you can buy camp stove fuel at walmart. I get crown brand for much less than coleman.
DaveSSS is offline  
Old 02-06-23, 04:41 PM
  #62  
SoSmellyAir
Method to My Madness
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 2,621

Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1330 Post(s)
Liked 918 Times in 668 Posts
Originally Posted by DaveSSS View Post
No point in long soaks, agitation is what's needed. See if you can buy camp stove fuel at walmart. I get crown brand for much less than coleman.
I can buy camp fuel at REI but would not dare to use camp fuel with the laundry machine agitation method, especially since I have a gas dryer.
SoSmellyAir is offline  
Old 02-06-23, 06:51 PM
  #63  
timtak
Senior Member
 
timtak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Yamaguchi City, Japan
Posts: 1,074

Bikes: Trek Madone 5.2 SL 2007, Look KG386, R022 Re-framed Azzurri Primo, Felt Z5, Trek F7.3 FX

Mentioned: 36 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 396 Post(s)
Liked 83 Times in 71 Posts
Originally Posted by DaveSSS View Post
No point in long soaks, agitation is what's needed. See if you can buy camp stove fuel at walmart. I get crown brand for much less than coleman.
I sometimes use my whole body vibration machine -- they are cheap second hand because they are not terribly useful for exercise imho -- to agitate my chain between hot waxes (candles, ptf and Molybdenum Disulfide). Taking a waxed chain off is pretty easy with a quick link because you don't get dirty hands (or hardly). Every 300km about. I'll do it now.

The hole body vibration machine also gets used as a leg stretching device.
timtak is offline  
Likes For timtak:
Old 02-07-23, 11:44 AM
  #64  
terrymorse 
climber has-been
 
terrymorse's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Palo Alto, CA
Posts: 5,856

Bikes: Scott Addict R1

Mentioned: 10 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2328 Post(s)
Liked 2,313 Times in 1,172 Posts
Originally Posted by timtak View Post
The hole body vibration machine also gets used as a leg stretching device.
Awkward typo there, Tim.
__________________
Ride, Rest, Repeat

terrymorse is offline  
Old 02-07-23, 08:55 PM
  #65  
timtak
Senior Member
 
timtak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Yamaguchi City, Japan
Posts: 1,074

Bikes: Trek Madone 5.2 SL 2007, Look KG386, R022 Re-framed Azzurri Primo, Felt Z5, Trek F7.3 FX

Mentioned: 36 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 396 Post(s)
Liked 83 Times in 71 Posts
Well spotted. A Freudian slip from my gay side, quite probably....
The hole [in my] body, vibration machine...
My hole [every]body, vibration machine!

Here it is being used to clean my chain (these days I use a container with a lid). Click through for a video.

Chain Cleaning by Timothy Takemoto, on Flickr
timtak is offline  
Old 02-08-23, 06:05 PM
  #66  
SoSmellyAir
Method to My Madness
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 2,621

Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX

Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1330 Post(s)
Liked 918 Times in 668 Posts
Originally Posted by timtak View Post
I sometimes use my whole body vibration machine -- they are cheap second hand because they are not terribly useful for exercise imho -- to agitate my chain between hot waxes ...
This is a great idea. I was looking at orbital shaker (like from biochemistry lab back in college) but these are < half the cost.
SoSmellyAir is offline  
Likes For SoSmellyAir:
Old 02-09-23, 10:07 AM
  #67  
easyupbug 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 2,416

Bikes: too many sparkly Italians, some sweet Americans and a couple interesting Japanese

Mentioned: 8 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 485 Post(s)
Liked 442 Times in 322 Posts
I posted this on Bike Mechanics discussion:Switching to a Catrike recumbent trike on bad arthritis days and finding my calf/clothes get marked by that very long bike chain, times 3 length, I switched to solvent wax and am very happy with the results. Still early but wear rate looks good to date and being retired I take the time to keep my bikes spotless and the trike was much more work with my homebrew when compared to my uprights.

Tried
scottfsmith application method with a never used dusty Park Tool Chain cleaner going slow to not make a mess and it was pretty clean and much faster than dripping on 100s of links.
easyupbug is offline  
Old 04-27-23, 05:51 PM
  #68  
mschwett 
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 1,572

Bikes: aethos, creo, vanmoof, public ...

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 930 Post(s)
Liked 1,035 Times in 552 Posts
resurrecting my own semizombie thread...

still pretty happy with drip wax except for chain longevity. replaced last chain at 2,500 miles and it was far enough gone (maybe .6%) that the 11t and 12t cogs also had to be replaced (skipping under load, by load i mean 500-1000w).

the latest chain, which i've been cleaning more and lubing a little less, per shop recommendation, is at 1,600 miles and almost fits into the .5% side of my chain checker. .4% or so. seems like the wear rate is extremely similar. seems like very short chain life.
__________________
mschwett is offline  
Old 04-27-23, 06:23 PM
  #69  
Troul 
Senior Member
 
Troul's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Mich
Posts: 6,429

Bikes: RSO E-tire dropper fixie brifter

Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Liked 2,319 Times in 1,553 Posts
Originally Posted by mschwett View Post
resurrecting my own semizombie thread...

still pretty happy with drip wax except for chain longevity. replaced last chain at 2,500 miles and it was far enough gone (maybe .6%) that the 11t and 12t cogs also had to be replaced (skipping under load, by load i mean 500-1000w).

the latest chain, which i've been cleaning more and lubing a little less, per shop recommendation, is at 1,600 miles and almost fits into the .5% side of my chain checker. .4% or so. seems like the wear rate is extremely similar. seems like very short chain life.
I've noticed this too. Although, I've noticed the noise to be less when compared to a traditional lubed chain. That is only if the wear is below a certain amount. Once the waxed chain gets stretched to a point, the noise is no different than a gunked up greased chain.
I do like being able to not "mark" my own territory with the cleanliness of the waxed chain.
__________________
-Oh Hey!
Troul is offline  
Old 04-27-23, 09:12 PM
  #70  
spelger
Senior Member
 
spelger's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: reno, nv
Posts: 1,889

Bikes: yes, i have one

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 929 Post(s)
Liked 988 Times in 562 Posts
its funny, i've been waxing for a long time and i still get chain ring tattoos. pretty sure the dark color is from the chain ring anodizing wearing off.
spelger is offline  
Old 04-28-23, 06:49 PM
  #71  
Lombard
Sock Puppet
 
Lombard's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2022
Location: Planet Earth
Posts: 1,561

Bikes: 2014 Cannondale Synapse Carbon, 2017 Jamis Renegade Exploit and too many others to mention.

Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 951 Post(s)
Liked 794 Times in 531 Posts
Originally Posted by spelger View Post
its funny, i've been waxing for a long time and i still get chain ring tattoos. pretty sure the dark color is from the chain ring anodizing wearing off.
No, that's dirt. Contrary to what many believe, drip was is not clean. It attracts dirt and gets gummy.
Lombard is offline  
Old 04-28-23, 08:01 PM
  #72  
spelger
Senior Member
 
spelger's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: reno, nv
Posts: 1,889

Bikes: yes, i have one

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 929 Post(s)
Liked 988 Times in 562 Posts
Originally Posted by Lombard View Post
No, that's dirt. Contrary to what many believe, drip was is not clean. It attracts dirt and gets gummy.
not sure if it matters but i don't use drip, i do the hot wax thing. but, i think you are right about the dirt. just today while adjusting my FD on a very new bike and was surprised to find as much black dirt on the underside of the BB shell. i've only had it out for about 6 rides now. i never ride in wet conditions.
spelger is offline  
Old 04-28-23, 08:24 PM
  #73  
Lombard
Sock Puppet
 
Lombard's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2022
Location: Planet Earth
Posts: 1,561

Bikes: 2014 Cannondale Synapse Carbon, 2017 Jamis Renegade Exploit and too many others to mention.

Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 951 Post(s)
Liked 794 Times in 531 Posts
Originally Posted by spelger View Post
not sure if it matters but i don't use drip, i do the hot wax thing. but, i think you are right about the dirt. just today while adjusting my FD on a very new bike and was surprised to find as much black dirt on the underside of the BB shell. i've only had it out for about 6 rides now. i never ride in wet conditions.
I must have assumed you were using drip wax because that's what the thread title is about.

Dry riding won't collect as much dirt, but there is still dry road dirt kicking up all the time. Sometime at the end of your ride, wipe a tire with your hand as you roll it. You will have a black stripe on your hand.
Lombard is offline  
Old 05-14-23, 05:51 PM
  #74  
mschwett 
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: May 2021
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 1,572

Bikes: aethos, creo, vanmoof, public ...

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 930 Post(s)
Liked 1,035 Times in 552 Posts
I started using a little less drip wax per application, but slightly more frequently with more frequent cleaning with the park cyclone. Bike sounds great, less accumulation of visible crud, but wear rate appears identical.

latest chain is almost reading .5 on the checker, at 2,000 miles. Measuring it carefully under moderate tension suggests the same. Thinking i might bite the bullet and replace it now to save my 11t and 12t this time… although they’re pretty cheap.
__________________
mschwett is offline  
Old 05-14-23, 06:18 PM
  #75  
bblair
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Columbus, Ohio
Posts: 530

Bikes: Lynskey R230, Trek 5200, 1975 Raleigh Pro, 1973 Falcon ,Trek T50 Tandem and a 1968 Paramount in progress.

Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 261 Post(s)
Liked 250 Times in 156 Posts
Squirt user here. I would guess about 2-300 miles between applications, but in the summer I wash my bike that often anyway, so reapply. Dawn dish liquid gets my drivetrain sparkly clean.

But in the cold, wet salty days.....those are inside days for me. And it's not because I want to keep my chain dry.
bblair is offline  

Thread Tools
Search this Thread

Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information -

Copyright © 2023 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.