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dish soap to clean chain?
so my chain was dirty, didnt feel like taking it off again, and i remembered that dish soap is advertised as "grease cutting".
so i put some foam on a wet paper towel, and ran the chain through. long story short, it took the grease off like a bauce. the chain was shiny clean after a few passes. i rinsed it and re-greased it. bad? good? |
I don't think I would do it. I clean my chain with Kerosene. It removes the grease and is suppose to protect it too. Then, I oil it with Pro Gold. Always worked for me.
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Dude, its a chain...if it gets f'd up, buy a new one.
Anything from Pamolive to Simple Green...as long as it cuts the grease, you're good to go as long as you lube it afterwards. |
Originally Posted by Inertianinja
(Post 11087330)
so my bird was dirty, didnt feel like taking it off again, and i remembered that dish soap is advertised as "grease cutting".
so i put some foam on a wet paper towel, and ran the bird through. long story short, it took the grease off like a bauce. the bird was clean after a few passes. i rinsed it and re-greased it. bad? good? What the heck is a bauce?? Sounds Catalonish to me. |
Originally Posted by Inertianinja
(Post 11087330)
so my chain was dirty, didnt feel like taking it off again, and i remembered that dish soap is advertised as "grease cutting".
so i put some foam on a wet paper towel, and ran the chain through. long story short, it took the grease off like a bauce. the chain was shiny clean after a few passes. i rinsed it and re-greased it. bad? good? You did good. |
Dish soap is fine for cleaning a chain ... you might want to watch the paper towel though because bits of it can break off and stick to parts of the chain. Most of the time when I clean my chains, I use an old sock.
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Originally Posted by simonaway427
(Post 11087399)
Dude, its a chain...if it gets f'd up, buy a new one.
Anything from Pamolive to Simple Green...as long as it cuts the grease, you're good to go as long as you lube it afterwards. |
"bauce" = boss = "like a boss" :)
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Great Idea. Did you use dawn?
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I don't clean chains. I just lube, wipe, and ride.
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I just cleaned my chain last night. It is the quickest job to do on my bike.
Take off the KMC Missing Link Plunk chain into old water bottle Add a little recycled mineral spirits Shake vigorously for about two minutes Hang to dry, then lube. The whole job takes me about 10minutes or less. |
Originally Posted by caloso
(Post 11088100)
I don't clean chains. I just lube, wipe, and ride.
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Originally Posted by caloso
(Post 11088100)
I don't clean chains. I just lube, wipe, and ride.
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Originally Posted by caloso
(Post 11088100)
I just lube, wipe, and ride.
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I ride, lube, and wipe.
Am I doing it wrong? |
Chains are basically disposeable, aren't they? I clean about once a year by letting it sit overnight in orange degreaser (available cheap and by the gallon at Home Depot). The rest of the season I just do the ride, lube, wipe thing. I check my chain stretch every time I lube and replace when it gets too large.
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http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41OG4hqSMxL.jpg
Just sayin'. Takes two minutes. Dish soap is fine for me. |
Originally Posted by Matt Gaunt
(Post 11088748)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41OG4hqSMxL.jpg
Just sayin'. Takes two minutes. Dish soap is fine for me. Brush off cobwebs Find correct degreaser bottle. Note its empty. Curse using it to clean the BBQ Ride to LBS Hand over 1/3 cost of a new chain for degreaser. Ride home, stopping for an ice cream cause its pretty hot out. Fill park tool chain cleaner. Note spongy thing is kinda falling apart and wonder if the LBS can get one in. Clean chain anyway. Dump excess degreaser stuff in drain. Wipe down chain tool cleaner. Note stuff is still dripping out. Store in bucket. wipe chain, lube chain, ride(if you can be bothered after all that). |
Originally Posted by znomit
(Post 11088768)
Dig park tool cleaner out
Brush off cobwebs Find correct degreaser bottle. Note its empty. Curse using it to clean the BBQ Ride to LBS Hand over 1/3 cost of a new chain for degreaser. Ride home, stopping for an ice cream cause its pretty hot out. Fill park tool chain cleaner. Note spongy thing is kinda falling apart and wonder if the LBS can get one in. Clean chain anyway. Dump excess degreaser stuff in drain. Wipe down chain tool cleaner. Note stuff is still dripping out. Store in bucket. wipe chain, lube chain, ride(if you can be bothered after all that). Those things are craptacular. I've had a Park and a Pedro's. They're both junk waiting to happen. |
remove chain
place in mason jar with mineral spirits shake hang to let dry lube install and ride I've tried the park tool thing too, pain in the arse. |
Originally Posted by lazerzxr
(Post 11088627)
That's what she said.:)
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I assumed mineral spirits was better since it evaporates naturally unlike dish soap, which needs to be washed off.
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Originally Posted by 383
(Post 11089466)
I assumed mineral spirits was better since it evaporates naturally unlike dish soap, which needs to be washed off.
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it's what i've always used. i asked a guy at my lbs if i was doing it wrong, he said no and recommended dawn.
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Originally Posted by Carbon Unit
(Post 11089574)
I had the owner of a bike saddle company, who is also a former Formula One mechanic, tell me that kerosene is best for cleaning bike chains. He said that is coats the chain in a way that acts as a lubricant. It is also cheap. My wife hates it because it makes it has a strong gasoline smell. Not sure if coating the chain is important because I always use chain oil after cleaning. I am considering a chain cleaning kit. I read that Finish Line makes a better kit than Park does, according to the reviews from people that have used both.
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