Immersive waxing / it should be more popular
#1226
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 7,068
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4409 Post(s)
Liked 1,566 Times
in
1,028 Posts
Factory lube will contaminate it, so does road debris, dirt, grime, etc. The former is avoidable; the latter is not.
Soaking a chain in fuel overnight and rinsing it after is not really ''more work''. I rinse and pre-wash my car before washing it - same principle apply here.
Soaking a chain in fuel overnight and rinsing it after is not really ''more work''. I rinse and pre-wash my car before washing it - same principle apply here.
We disagree what work is. Doing stuff that takes your time and effort is work - including the effort it takes to get rid of the dirty solvent.
#1227
Senior Member
Waxing a new chain in a sauce pan with a pound of wax isnt doing anything detrimantal and its so much less work and much faster than a crock pot or the silly little 100w silca pot. But yeah I get where you are coming from. You bough into the hype that you need expensive wax, that you don want to ruin, and that the chain MUST be 100.000% clean before it can be waxed. Thus you end up messing with "bike specific" chain degreasers, toxic solvents, ultrasonic cleaning machines, strip chips, crock pots, little waxing machines etc. All a huge faff and expense that you tirelessly try to explain away. I was merely pointing out there is a much easier route. It may not be 100.000% as perfect but it will get you "95%" of the way with notably less faff and expense. - However, ppl refuse to believe it. Only perceived perfection will do, leading to you to dream up random, complicated procedures that only the most anal will keep up in the long run.
IF i cared to clean a chain id do it in an other "dirty" sauce pan with cheap wax. Hot wax will dissolve factory grease or melt away old wax lube. Eliminating any other cleaning product and eliminating getting the chain wet, if hot water is you preferred cleaning method.
IF i cared to clean a chain id do it in an other "dirty" sauce pan with cheap wax. Hot wax will dissolve factory grease or melt away old wax lube. Eliminating any other cleaning product and eliminating getting the chain wet, if hot water is you preferred cleaning method.
If it's using cheap candle paraffin, well sure, that'll work. I did it for a while. But if getting something better allows me to get one more week or 100km more out of a waxing, I'm going to spend the money to get something better. Less effort is still less effort even if I do have a pretty neat system in place.
In terms of friction and efficiency, there isn't that big of a difference between candle wax and the best of the best, but there still is a difference, if you care for such a thing. I don't. I care about longevity.
Mind you, the wax I'm using now is a cycling specific special wax (the call it paraffin, but I'm doubtful, since the melting point is around 90 celsius). So far it's best I've tried and holds on really well against water and salt contamination.
It cost me 30 euros for a kilo, so that's around 30 bucks for two pounds. I wouldn't call it excessive.
#1228
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Québec, Canada
Posts: 2,114
Bikes: SL8 Pro, TCR beater
Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 989 Post(s)
Liked 586 Times
in
440 Posts
What in fact is your alternative?
If it's using cheap candle paraffin, well sure, that'll work. I did it for a while. But if getting something better allows me to get one more week or 100km more out of a waxing, I'm going to spend the money to get something better. Less effort is still less effort even if I do have a pretty neat system in place.
In terms of friction and efficiency, there isn't that big of a difference between candle wax and the best of the best, but there still is a difference, if you care for such a thing. I don't. I care about longevity.
Mind you, the wax I'm using now is a cycling specific special wax (the call it paraffin, but I'm doubtful, since the melting point is around 90 celsius). So far it's best I've tried and holds on really well against water and salt contamination.
It cost me 30 euros for a kilo, so that's around 30 bucks for two pounds. I wouldn't call it excessive.
If it's using cheap candle paraffin, well sure, that'll work. I did it for a while. But if getting something better allows me to get one more week or 100km more out of a waxing, I'm going to spend the money to get something better. Less effort is still less effort even if I do have a pretty neat system in place.
In terms of friction and efficiency, there isn't that big of a difference between candle wax and the best of the best, but there still is a difference, if you care for such a thing. I don't. I care about longevity.
Mind you, the wax I'm using now is a cycling specific special wax (the call it paraffin, but I'm doubtful, since the melting point is around 90 celsius). So far it's best I've tried and holds on really well against water and salt contamination.
It cost me 30 euros for a kilo, so that's around 30 bucks for two pounds. I wouldn't call it excessive.
Check out OZ Cycle's videos about it on YouTube. He's knowledgeable and trustable.
#1229
Senior Member
What in fact is your alternative?
If it's using cheap candle paraffin, well sure, that'll work. I did it for a while. But if getting something better allows me to get one more week or 100km more out of a waxing, I'm going to spend the money to get something better. Less effort is still less effort even if I do have a pretty neat system in place.
In terms of friction and efficiency, there isn't that big of a difference between candle wax and the best of the best, but there still is a difference, if you care for such a thing. I don't. I care about longevity.
Mind you, the wax I'm using now is a cycling specific special wax (the call it paraffin, but I'm doubtful, since the melting point is around 90 celsius). So far it's best I've tried and holds on really well against water and salt contamination.
It cost me 30 euros for a kilo, so that's around 30 bucks for two pounds. I wouldn't call it excessive.
If it's using cheap candle paraffin, well sure, that'll work. I did it for a while. But if getting something better allows me to get one more week or 100km more out of a waxing, I'm going to spend the money to get something better. Less effort is still less effort even if I do have a pretty neat system in place.
In terms of friction and efficiency, there isn't that big of a difference between candle wax and the best of the best, but there still is a difference, if you care for such a thing. I don't. I care about longevity.
Mind you, the wax I'm using now is a cycling specific special wax (the call it paraffin, but I'm doubtful, since the melting point is around 90 celsius). So far it's best I've tried and holds on really well against water and salt contamination.
It cost me 30 euros for a kilo, so that's around 30 bucks for two pounds. I wouldn't call it excessive.
Whats my alternative? To what?
I believe I made my point clearly, several times by now.
Get a new chain and wax it, in a sauce pan, straight form the package with no prep, in what ever wax you like. Should take only a few minutes, including waiting for the wax to melt. I trust you are not a child and wont set your house on fire or stink it up with wax smoke.
Rewax it i the same wax without cleaning it in advance. - Unless its a very soft wax it will retain only little old wax and grit. I believe it makes no or very little difference.
If you insist not getting dirt in your wax id get an other sauce pan with cheap paraffin wax or similar and swish/wash the chain in there. It will get off old lube and the tiny amount of "different" wax isn't going to do any harm in the "main" wax. -Why? Because, no wet chain, no chemicals to dispose of and no chemicals that need flushing from the chain. Just a block of wax that can be discarded as normal house hold waste.
#1230
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 7,068
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4409 Post(s)
Liked 1,566 Times
in
1,028 Posts
Whats my alternative? To what?
I believe I made my point clearly, several times by now.
Get a new chain and wax it, in a sauce pan, straight form the package with no prep, in what ever wax you like. Should take only a few minutes, including waiting for the wax to melt. I trust you are not a child and wont set your house on fire or stink it up with wax smoke.
Rewax it i the same wax without cleaning it in advance. - Unless its a very soft wax it will retain only little old wax and grit. I believe it makes no or very little difference.
If you insist not getting dirt in your wax id get an other sauce pan with cheap paraffin wax or similar and swish/wash the chain in there. It will get off old lube and the tiny amount of "different" wax isn't going to do any harm in the "main" wax. -Why? Because, no wet chain, no chemicals to dispose of and no chemicals that need flushing from the chain. Just a block of wax that can be discarded as normal house hold waste.
I believe I made my point clearly, several times by now.
Get a new chain and wax it, in a sauce pan, straight form the package with no prep, in what ever wax you like. Should take only a few minutes, including waiting for the wax to melt. I trust you are not a child and wont set your house on fire or stink it up with wax smoke.
Rewax it i the same wax without cleaning it in advance. - Unless its a very soft wax it will retain only little old wax and grit. I believe it makes no or very little difference.
If you insist not getting dirt in your wax id get an other sauce pan with cheap paraffin wax or similar and swish/wash the chain in there. It will get off old lube and the tiny amount of "different" wax isn't going to do any harm in the "main" wax. -Why? Because, no wet chain, no chemicals to dispose of and no chemicals that need flushing from the chain. Just a block of wax that can be discarded as normal house hold waste.
#1231
Senior Member
Whats my alternative? To what?
I believe I made my point clearly, several times by now.
Get a new chain and wax it, in a sauce pan, straight form the package with no prep, in what ever wax you like. Should take only a few minutes, including waiting for the wax to melt. I trust you are not a child and wont set your house on fire or stink it up with wax smoke.
Rewax it i the same wax without cleaning it in advance. - Unless its a very soft wax it will retain only little old wax and grit. I believe it makes no or very little difference.
If you insist not getting dirt in your wax id get an other sauce pan with cheap paraffin wax or similar and swish/wash the chain in there. It will get off old lube and the tiny amount of "different" wax isn't going to do any harm in the "main" wax. -Why? Because, no wet chain, no chemicals to dispose of and no chemicals that need flushing from the chain. Just a block of wax that can be discarded as normal house hold waste.
I believe I made my point clearly, several times by now.
Get a new chain and wax it, in a sauce pan, straight form the package with no prep, in what ever wax you like. Should take only a few minutes, including waiting for the wax to melt. I trust you are not a child and wont set your house on fire or stink it up with wax smoke.
Rewax it i the same wax without cleaning it in advance. - Unless its a very soft wax it will retain only little old wax and grit. I believe it makes no or very little difference.
If you insist not getting dirt in your wax id get an other sauce pan with cheap paraffin wax or similar and swish/wash the chain in there. It will get off old lube and the tiny amount of "different" wax isn't going to do any harm in the "main" wax. -Why? Because, no wet chain, no chemicals to dispose of and no chemicals that need flushing from the chain. Just a block of wax that can be discarded as normal house hold waste.
Do you even realize why people prefer slow cooker to a sauce pan? It's because with a sauce pan you need to watch over the wax lest it gets too hot. With a slow cooker you can leave the wax to melt and go off to do something else, like drink a beer or what have you.
A lot of people who got into waxing started out with a sauce pan. And decided afterwards that it'd be nice that you don't have to watch over the wax as it melts. But I suppose some people want to be in control and plop the chain in as soon as the wax has melted.
As to wanting the wax to stay clean. It depends on the conditions one rides in. But I don't get why one would use a sacrificial cleaning wax when boiling water does the same thing but is a lot more care free. I prefer not to contaminate my main wax with salt so I boil my chains before I wax them.
Boiling water is really easy. Doesn't require a slow cooker. Water isn't flammable nor are water vapors harmful. I can also dump the water afterwards. And water doesn't contaminate wax.
But wouldn't you know it, I actually tried not doing any cleaning via sacrificial waxing or boiling before waxing my chains. But unfortunately during the winter the wax I was using turned so gray that I just didn't want to use it anymore. Also the bottom of the puck had a solid 1cm layer of gunky wax which I tried scraping off but just gave up. No such issues after I started boiling my chains.
#1232
Senior Member
Considering your other threads, I'm not surprised...
#1233
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 5,954
Bikes: Colnago, Van Dessel, Factor, Cervelo, Ritchey
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3956 Post(s)
Liked 7,307 Times
in
2,949 Posts
Firstly often in these waxing topics there are people who feel the need to disparage the effort required for waxing and give "advice" about how it's much simpler just to apply one drop of lube per roller and wipe clean. Considering how large of an undertaking cleaning an oiled dirty chain is, I doubt many do it all that often. So the method of applying lube on a not completely sterile chain is pretty common.
#1234
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Québec, Canada
Posts: 2,114
Bikes: SL8 Pro, TCR beater
Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 989 Post(s)
Liked 586 Times
in
440 Posts
Indeed. 90% of the cyclists I see when I ride have black chains and black cassettes. Funny thing is, half of them probably don't know that the real color is silver. Law of least effort?
#1235
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 5,954
Bikes: Colnago, Van Dessel, Factor, Cervelo, Ritchey
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3956 Post(s)
Liked 7,307 Times
in
2,949 Posts
#1236
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 7,068
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4409 Post(s)
Liked 1,566 Times
in
1,028 Posts
Would you care to say what product you're using? Sounds good, being longer lasting yet not as pricey as most branded wax.
#1237
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 7,068
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4409 Post(s)
Liked 1,566 Times
in
1,028 Posts
Aside from not prepping the chain before the first waxing, isn't that pretty much the basic recommended procedure that's touted pretty much everywhere? Or are you too deep into your own strawman about Silca slow cookers?
Do you even realize why people prefer slow cooker to a sauce pan? It's because with a sauce pan you need to watch over the wax lest it gets too hot. With a slow cooker you can leave the wax to melt and go off to do something else, like drink a beer or what have you.
A lot of people who got into waxing started out with a sauce pan. And decided afterwards that it'd be nice that you don't have to watch over the wax as it melts. But I suppose some people want to be in control and plop the chain in as soon as the wax has melted.
As to wanting the wax to stay clean. It depends on the conditions one rides in. But I don't get why one would use a sacrificial cleaning wax when boiling water does the same thing but is a lot more care free. I prefer not to contaminate my main wax with salt so I boil my chains before I wax them.
Boiling water is really easy. Doesn't require a slow cooker. Water isn't flammable nor are water vapors harmful. I can also dump the water afterwards. And water doesn't contaminate wax.
But wouldn't you know it, I actually tried not doing any cleaning via sacrificial waxing or boiling before waxing my chains. But unfortunately during the winter the wax I was using turned so gray that I just didn't want to use it anymore. Also the bottom of the puck had a solid 1cm layer of gunky wax which I tried scraping off but just gave up. No such issues after I started boiling my chains.
Do you even realize why people prefer slow cooker to a sauce pan? It's because with a sauce pan you need to watch over the wax lest it gets too hot. With a slow cooker you can leave the wax to melt and go off to do something else, like drink a beer or what have you.
A lot of people who got into waxing started out with a sauce pan. And decided afterwards that it'd be nice that you don't have to watch over the wax as it melts. But I suppose some people want to be in control and plop the chain in as soon as the wax has melted.
As to wanting the wax to stay clean. It depends on the conditions one rides in. But I don't get why one would use a sacrificial cleaning wax when boiling water does the same thing but is a lot more care free. I prefer not to contaminate my main wax with salt so I boil my chains before I wax them.
Boiling water is really easy. Doesn't require a slow cooker. Water isn't flammable nor are water vapors harmful. I can also dump the water afterwards. And water doesn't contaminate wax.
But wouldn't you know it, I actually tried not doing any cleaning via sacrificial waxing or boiling before waxing my chains. But unfortunately during the winter the wax I was using turned so gray that I just didn't want to use it anymore. Also the bottom of the puck had a solid 1cm layer of gunky wax which I tried scraping off but just gave up. No such issues after I started boiling my chains.
Double the wax, double the time.
#1238
Senior Member
If you use a pan with the minimum wax to cover the chain, it melts in 5 minutes on low. If you start with the chain under the wax everything is up to temp when the wax is all liquid and then you take it off. It never gets close to too hot and you look at bikeforums for a few minutes while you wait.
Double the wax, double the time.
Double the wax, double the time.
I don't use the slow cooker anymore, because it actually doesn't work with a wax that has a melting point above 90 celsius.
Likes For elcruxio:
#1239
Not actually Tmonk
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 14,138
Bikes: road, track, mtb
Mentioned: 140 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2640 Post(s)
Liked 3,153 Times
in
1,660 Posts
just gonna chime in here and comment again that there is a "middle way" when it comes to waxing - but one has to be OK with a little bit of grit on their bike and in the crock pot. doesn't bother me and I still don't hesitate to handle my drivetrain with bare hands. my methods involve zero inter-wax treatment, just the initial de-greasing of the factory wax. skimming through the thread, it seems like that's not even necessary either, which has me intrigued.
__________________
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
#1240
Method to My Madness
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Orange County, California
Posts: 3,664
Bikes: Trek FX 2, Cannondale Synapse, Cannondale CAAD4, Santa Cruz Stigmata GRX
Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1948 Post(s)
Liked 1,472 Times
in
1,020 Posts
2. Even my $10 2 Qt. Crock-Pot can reach the simmer point (209 *F or 98 *C) under both low and high temperature settings.
Slow Cooker Cooking Tips | Crockpot® (crock-pot.com)
#1241
Senior Member
Never had issues just once a month cleaning with 1 step. I don't see the big deal. Simple green on the cassette and chainring. It takes like 10 minutes.
#1242
member
I switched to wax a while ago for all my road/gravel/mtb bikes, absolutely love it!. Started with Candle Wax, switched to Silca after a while. A thought occurred to me - I have access to bunch of honey combs, can I use bees wax for my chains? I have PTFE, what is unclear to me whether bees wax is as good as paraffin wax for my chains. Thoughts?
Last edited by vtje; 03-13-24 at 09:31 PM.
#1243
Just Pedaling
Join Date: Oct 2021
Location: US West Coast
Posts: 1,014
Bikes: YEP!
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 334 Post(s)
Liked 522 Times
in
348 Posts
I switched to wax a while ago for all my road/gravel/mtb bikes, absolutely love it!. Started with Candle Wax, switched to Silca after a while. A thought occurred to me - I have access to bunch of bee combs, can I use bees wax for my chains? I have PTFE, what is unclear to me whether bees wax is as good as paraffin wax for my chains. Thoughts?
Likes For SpedFast:
#1244
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 5,954
Bikes: Colnago, Van Dessel, Factor, Cervelo, Ritchey
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3956 Post(s)
Liked 7,307 Times
in
2,949 Posts
#1246
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 7,068
Mentioned: 41 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4409 Post(s)
Liked 1,566 Times
in
1,028 Posts
I switched to wax a while ago for all my road/gravel/mtb bikes, absolutely love it!. Started with Candle Wax, switched to Silca after a while. A thought occurred to me - I have access to bunch of honey combs, can I use bees wax for my chains? I have PTFE, what is unclear to me whether bees wax is as good as paraffin wax for my chains. Thoughts?
#1247
Senior Member
I switched to wax a while ago for all my road/gravel/mtb bikes, absolutely love it!. Started with Candle Wax, switched to Silca after a while. A thought occurred to me - I have access to bunch of honey combs, can I use bees wax for my chains? I have PTFE, what is unclear to me whether bees wax is as good as paraffin wax for my chains. Thoughts?
Chain waxes need to be hard and slippery. Otherwise efficiency goes out the window and the chain won't be protected as the soft wax is just cleared away by the chain moving. A hard wax leaves a slippery film on metal which is surprisingly hard to wear off.
#1248
Not actually Tmonk
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 14,138
Bikes: road, track, mtb
Mentioned: 140 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2640 Post(s)
Liked 3,153 Times
in
1,660 Posts
Switched back to wet lube on my MTB. I like to ride in riparian and/or mountain ecosystems, so a wet or muddy drivetrain happened often enough to piss me off and ruin the wax job.
Road, TT, track, trainer bikes - still waxing
Road, TT, track, trainer bikes - still waxing
__________________
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
Likes For TMonk:
#1249
Newbie
I just put wax on my MTB chain. Usually the most I’ll deal with the wet is a stream crossing, so we will see how it goes.
Likes For McFlyRides: