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Old 08-24-20, 02:24 AM
  #18  
cprobertson1
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Join Date: May 2020
Location: Ayrshire, Scotland
Posts: 37

Bikes: Peugeot First-Rider 2000, Freego Wisper (Pedelec)

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Originally Posted by archicarla
Updates!
- Diving / hauling out mission was a great success. No dramas. One diver (me) and two guys up top on the other end of the line.
- rinsed thoroughly on the dock with fresh water everywhere.
- Got them home and took headsets and seat posts off and let all the water drip out / evaporate there. True to cproberton1's original post, water was *everywhere* including kickstand, handlebars, inside the rims, you name it! Washed everything with a cloth / soap & water
- We have befallen the age-old trap of some people saying WD40 everything and some people saying "sacrilege!!!" so we ended up hedging our bets and using some WD40 sparingly in some areas...
- My bike chain started to rust really quickly, so I WD40d it, then put chain lube on it. BF's chain seemed fine after rinsing so just soap & water & lube.
- BF took his out for a ride and said "if I didn't know this bike was a the bottom of the ocean 4 hours ago, I absolutely wouldn't notice anything wrong." Internal hub worked fine, brakes worked fine.
- LBS will take a look at the hubs and brake cables/pads etc today and let us know what else they think we need to do!

I think the short time in the water, being submerged and not in/out of the water repeatedly, and relatively shallow depth/low pressure has been kind to these bikes. They seem totally fine, for the price of $55 scuba gear rental and TBD bike shop fees.

How this happened... started with a bad idea that the 'safest' spot to park our bikes at the marina would be *not* at the bike rack near the gated entry ramp (too visible to thieves, he said!), but rather at the very end of the ~5' wide dock finger where our sailboat is moored. We returned to the dock after a day out, BF stepped off the boat onto the dock to tie on the lines, the dock pitched just a little too much for my kickstand angle, and like dominoes they both fell very (very) quickly straight over the side. So, in other words, a completely avoidable situation that was no one's fault but our own! Yayyyyyy....
Man, just thinking of those bikes toppling off the pier is giving me the heebie-jeebies! ::shudders::

I actually suspect you could have left them down there a few days longer without much further degradation (though I'm glad you didn't!) - the most important part of the rescue was getting all the conductive salt water off it as soon as you brought it back up to the high-oxygen atmosphere of our breathable world - so, good job on the rescue! Mind let us know how the repair costs turn out! xD
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