Results 51 to 75 of 228
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12-03-2021, 02:52 PM #51
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12-03-2021, 06:05 PM #52
Haha, was trying to throw a bone to the non-queso crowd in saying the initial clean was some work. It’s more work than just dripping on some traditional lube and pedaling. But, like I said, cleaning off the factory gunk probably is wise regardless of what you use. In that case, it’s definitely less work to run wax when you consider how little maintenance is required after the initial setup.
Re: dirty area. Not a moon dust area. Really wet, muddy area. Trail’s are slow to dry. Lots of creek crossings. But will also get dry dust in certain spots. Super humid southeast sand and mud-riding. Just feel like I can’t keep my bike clean around here, drivetrain was always squawking by the end of a long ride till I switched to wax (molten speedwax for me).
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12-03-2021, 08:35 PM #53Registered User
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before wax I would just use a liberal amount of pro-gold right on a chain right out of the wrapper to clean & lube as I ride,
then shop bro told me wax was the shit, he was into Boesheild, I stumbled onto squirt on-line tried it and stuck with it, not very scientificLee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
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12-04-2021, 09:07 AM #54
The re-penetration is essential to the testing and why Zero Friction uses a test rig that has high and low-tension zones (just like your drivetrain). They note that this is the most accurate test vs. other companies whom run high-tension on their tester and get very different results.
FWIW I think that SILCA drip is better than squirt in almost every facet, except that it's lower viscosity which makes it more difficult to drip with precision (I see dimes falling everytime Silca drip hits the floor).
Reference: https://cyclingtips.com/2021/05/alli...ed-for-gravel/
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12-04-2021, 09:16 AM #55
This would be interesting for the Silca synergetic lube. You can wipe it pretty dry and it does OK in dusty areas. Likely runs a touch more friction than Wax, but lasts longer, so potentially better performance.
On Ultra-long rides (e.g. Kokopelli), I have two techniques that I worked through with Adam from Zero Friction
1. Carry a second chain that is fully waxed and ready to go (this is nice because it offers a backup chain, JIC).
2. Re-lube the waxed chain with the synergetic when the waxed chain gets dry. (Re-lubing with wax without adequate time to dry leads to severely diminished returns.)
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10-02-2022, 09:46 PM #56
I pulled the wheels off my bike and tossed it in my car. When I reassembled it I found the chain had fallen off the front ring. Kind of a PITA with this chain guide but oh well. So I'm fucking with my chain trying to find the sweet spot where it slips through the little space and back onto the ring. So to make a short story long, after handling my chain I looked at my hands. They were fucking clean. This is the original chain that came with the bike in Feb 2020. It was queso dipped when new, cleaned and redipped once this spring. I drizzle bit of white lightning on it now and then but nothing more. I broke out my chain checker and it still doesn't register as stretched out. I'm beginning to think there might be something to this queso dip.
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10-02-2022, 09:55 PM #57
I'd edit to add this but it deletes when I try that so:
My queso mix is 4 parts parafin, 1 part bees wax and some PTFE. It recently got contaminated with a tiny bit of coconut oil when I burned some mustache wax I was mixing. I added about 1/4 part coconut oil and another 3/4 part bees wax to my mix.
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10-03-2022, 07:35 AM #58
I just spit my coffee on the screen when I read “I burned some mustache wax I was adding”
I don’t know why that was so funny.
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10-03-2022, 03:04 PM #59
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10-03-2022, 03:08 PM #60
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10-03-2022, 07:35 PM #61Registered User
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10-04-2022, 05:12 PM #62Registered User
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New Tech Talk thread: Mix Your Own Fucking Mustache Wax
In other news, I started using Silca Super Secret drip-on and it’s held up incredibly well. Not sure I ever want to go full crock pot queso but the Silca dude says this is as close a drip on can get, and it’s much more approachable.
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10-04-2022, 06:27 PM #63
Just do it!
I have a tub of Super Secret just sitting. Gone full Queso w/ Molten Speed Wax and not going back. I tell myself the Silca’s there for back-up in case I can’t fit the Queso dip in one time, but hasn’t actually happened.
The Queso process is super simple. More time than if all you ever do is just drop some lube on your dirty chain, but if you spend virtually any time cleaning your chain/drivetrain then the actual hands on time involved is probably less for Queso.
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10-05-2022, 01:24 PM #64
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10-05-2022, 01:41 PM #65
Not sure if this is the case, but if you watched the Silca video on hot melt, they make it way more complicated than it needs to be.
I do what Zero Friction recommends:
- wipe chain with rag sprayed with alcohol to remove surface dust
- remove chain from bike and thread onto swisher tool’ (bent coat hanger or similar)
- Optional: if cleaning is necessary (wet/mud riding) boil a pot of water and swish chain around for 30 seconds for three changes of water. Then blow dry with a compressor (or hairdryer)
- place chain in crockpot and turn heat to low. Leave uncovered.
- come back when wax is melted (an hour, next day, whenever) and swish the chain for 5-10 seconds
-hang chain to drip/cool
-break wax bond by bending chain around something (I run it around a cabinet handle)
- install chain
Don’t bother with cooling the wax to just above its hardening point. No evidence that has benefits, just wastes your time and extra wax.
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10-05-2022, 01:47 PM #66
Zero Friction has tested some DIY and they don’t perform the same as the commercial stuff - much better than most drip lubes though.
The base waxes the commercial guys are using are not the same stuff you can just grab from the store shelf. Also Silca and MSW are using Tungsten Disulfide instead of Teflon/PTFE. It’s lower friction while also environmentally sound (apparently).
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10-10-2022, 11:45 AM #67
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10-10-2022, 12:04 PM #68
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10-11-2022, 09:42 AM #69
The base wax I was using came from these guys:
https://www.skifastwax.com/
They're amazing, crazy, wax-scientist types. Far and away, the best ski waxes I've ever used.
For a short period, they offered a chainwax made of a very high end, flouro, ski wax. I added moly and PTFE to that.
EDIT: I just searched and found some:
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Fast-Wax-...-Kit/101212955
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10-11-2022, 09:48 AM #70
I’ve got shit tons of flouro ski wax…if I mask up can I just lump it all together and go?
Sent from my iPhone using TGR ForumsI rip the groomed on tele gear
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10-11-2022, 09:59 AM #71
I just received a sample of a chain wax that's being made by a long-time maker of flouro-free ski wax*. It's quite different from what I've used previously: pretty low melt temp (I'm told it can be adjusted, possibly by the end-user). It's actually so soft I was able to drip some on by melting it in my hand, so I expect at this formulation it will run liquid at every bend in the chain at most riding temps (as opposed to just melting at highly-loaded bend points, which seems probable for most quesos).
Is this unique among chain waxes? Wet dipped or dripped, I've always had a fully dry chain once wax is applied, but the possibility of wet inside/dry outside has me very intrigued. I plan to put this stuff on the fat bike chains as-is, but it seems a little low-temp for the desert, for example. We'll see how it goes in the NW ~70´s riding. (I still need another wipe/apply cycle to judge if it's collecting anything significant on the chains or not.)
* https://www.greenicewax.com/
The chemist who makes this knows his stuff. PM if you would like to beta test this and give feedback and/or want a discount code for Green Ice ski wax. PSA upcoming in Tech Talk, but MAGGOT30 gets 30% off (more available by PM for now).
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10-11-2022, 10:43 AM #72
No experience with that wax, but when Zero Friction tested the Absolute Black Queso it performed very poorly, and their hypothesis was that it was due to it being softer than Silca/MSW:
https://zerofrictioncycling.com.au/w...ENwax-v1.1.pdf
FWIW, the Absolute Black drip lube tested very well.
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10-11-2022, 11:41 AM #73
That's interesting. It would be kind of optimistic if hardness was the cause, since a harder wax might be a little less sticky. But what of the hypothesis that it's due to the graphene? Do they address that? (Sorry, 57 pages is a long read.)
I particularly note AB's claim about graphene: "It has extremely low friction coefficient in all the environments, is far stronger than any known material to a man and it can cling to metal"
I mean, which is it? What's to stop it from clinging to both pieces of metal and maybe folding over and digging in? I could see the argument for graphite or Bucky Balls, but unless you can wrap the pins in (giant) nanotubes, what's the point of getting silly with carbon?
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10-11-2022, 11:52 AM #74
Marketing, I’d assume.
Is graphene strong enough to ‘dig in’ to the metal? I’d assume it would break since it’s so thin and brittle.
My assumption is the base wax is by far the biggest determinant of performance.
Additional note: The Absolute Black Graphene lube tests very well, and it also contains graphene, natch. If it was the graphene causing wear, it would likely be an issue for the drip on wax lube as well, right?
(Nowhere in the test result doc does he put the blame on graphene, based on a quick word search.)
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10-11-2022, 12:02 PM #75
No idea about the final mechanics at one atom thick, really, but if its strength is high enough to matter (as claimed?) it seems like it would. It's gonna be stronger than aluminum oxide, and that stuff makes a real nice abrasive.
But yeah, breaking apart is probably the best case scenario and maybe it's just irrelevant.
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