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Chain Waxing is Sublime

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Old 02-15-24, 01:27 PM
  #26  
Iride01 
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Originally Posted by Polaris OBark
The real (non-hyperbole) reason I am asking is that I just got a new mountain bike with a12-speed GX Eagle transmission drive train, and I want it to last a long time. Waxing my chain on my gravel bike has greatly extended my cassette (and chains) lifetime. Given the price-tag of this SRAM stuff, and how I already heard and felt grinding after my first couple of rides, I decided to try wax on this one too. It got me wondering why this hasn't caught on with mountain bikers so much. Is it just because the drivetrain gets wet or muddy more easily, or is it bad for 12-speed drivetrains, or is it just custom?
If you like waxing your chain, then do so. Although my quip might have seemed sarcastic, I essentially meant that perhaps the majority of the MTN bikers you see just don't choose to wax their chains. And since your term sublime also can have the meaning of exalted, then that's why I chose "worship".

I only road bike, but even then I don't see the need to wax other than for the clean looks it gives to any that follow on your wheel. I don't feel it gives any materially longer life to the chain that for me and possibly others isn't more trouble over the life of the chain than just replacing them and the cassettes or rings when it's time. I've over 6000 miles on a 11 speed chain that still shows being no where close to replacement.. There might be other reasons than waxing your chain that you also started doing about the same time that gave you a longer chain life than before.

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Old 02-15-24, 01:29 PM
  #27  
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Got no time for waxing sublime. My chains are fine, and my bikes don't mind. Rags enough for the end of my time.
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Old 02-15-24, 01:40 PM
  #28  
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Originally Posted by Polaris OBark
But it concerns me that it is less prevalent amongst mountain bikers.

Opine.
I’ve been singing the praises of waxing since since the mid90s. This picture was taken in the dead of winter in 2009 and I’d been using solvent wax for at least a decade by then

IMG_1155 by Stuart Black, on Flickr

I don’t hot wax…too much bother…but solvent wax is effective and clean.
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Old 02-15-24, 02:08 PM
  #29  
Polaris OBark
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Originally Posted by Iride01
I only road bike, but even then I don't see the need to wax other than for the clean looks it gives .
I actually don't really care about the looks, but since I road-bike/gravel bike on a lot of fine grit, my drive train components were quickly being destroyed by grinding paste until I switched to waxing.

Since mountain biking is a more extreme case of this, the case for waxing (at least with my local conditions) seems more compelling.
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Old 02-15-24, 03:56 PM
  #30  
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Wax is not a lube.
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Old 02-15-24, 05:10 PM
  #31  
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Originally Posted by rydabent
Wax is not a lube.
Go learn a bit of chemistry and, perhaps, a bit of language. A lubricant is any substance that helps reduce friction between two surfaces. Water can be a lubricant. Oil can be a lubricant. Wax can be a lubricant too. Does something that is solid or semisolid not lubricate? Grease is a solid. Is it not a lubricant?

Yes, wax is a lubricant, both chemically and physically.
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Old 02-15-24, 05:13 PM
  #32  
Polaris OBark
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Originally Posted by rydabent
Wax is not a lube.
Recumbents aren't bicycles.
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