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Date: 21 Aug 2007 18:13:07
From:
Subject: Do "dry lubes" cause chans to skip?
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A while ago, I decided to try one of those "dry lubes." While I love the fact that the drivetrain doesn't instanly turn black upon riding the way "wet " lubes do, the dry ones seem to make for a noisier ride, and, worse, seem to make the chain MUCH more prone to skipping. I recently put a new chain on -- to which I applied several coats of the stuff -- along with a new cassette, and never had a freakin' chain skip like that in my entire life!! Are "wet" lubes better than the dry version? Or is there some kind of trick to using them? Would puting wet lube -- or something else -- on the now-dry-lubed chain help? Could this have happened because I first used a degreaser -- to get rid of that sticky stuff on the new chain -- before applying the dry lube?
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Date: 21 Aug 2007 22:37:14
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: Do "dry lubes" cause chans to skip?
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 18:13:07 -0700, anon_a_mouse@msn.com wrote: >A while ago, I decided to try one of those "dry lubes." While I love >the fact that the drivetrain doesn't instanly turn black upon riding >the way "wet " lubes do, the dry ones seem to make for a noisier ride, >and, worse, seem to make the chain MUCH more prone to skipping. I >recently put a new chain on -- to which I applied several coats of the >stuff -- along with a new cassette, and never had a freakin' chain >skip like that in my entire life!! Stiff link? I gave up on dry lube after the bottle was gone. I doesn't work in Vancouver 8 months out of twelve but causing a chain to skip wasn't one of its inadequacies. Maybe your chain colour clashes with those garish rims and tires? -- zk
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Date: 22 Aug 2007 15:08:40
From: smn
Subject: Re: Do "dry lubes" cause chans to skip?
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> Maybe your chain colour clashes with those garish rims and tires? > -- > zk Tell me aint true. chains cannot possibly come in colors. What are we coming to?
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Date: 22 Aug 2007 04:54:53
From: sally
Subject: Re: Do "dry lubes" cause chans to skip?
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anon_a_mouse@msn.com wrote in news:1187745187.325012.190360 @r23g2000prd.googlegroups.com: > A while ago, I decided to try one of those "dry lubes." While I love > the fact that the drivetrain doesn't instanly turn black upon riding > the way "wet " lubes do, the dry ones seem to make for a noisier ride, > and, worse, seem to make the chain MUCH more prone to skipping. Which one?? How did you apply it and how often? Some of the dry lubes have problems durability (may only last a few hours) and some have problems with buildup (causing inaccurate shifting) and all have problems with wet/rain conditions.
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Date: 22 Aug 2007 03:58:01
From: me
Subject: Re: Do "dry lubes" cause chans to skip?
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 18:13:07 -0700, anon_a_mouse wrote: > A while ago, I decided to try one of those "dry lubes." While I love > the fact that the drivetrain doesn't instanly turn black upon riding > the way "wet " lubes do, the dry ones seem to make for a noisier ride, > and, worse, seem to make the chain MUCH more prone to skipping. I > recently put a new chain on -- to which I applied several coats of the > stuff -- along with a new cassette, and never had a freakin' chain > skip like that in my entire life!! Are "wet" lubes better than the > dry version? Or is there some kind of trick to using them? Would > puting wet lube -- or something else -- on the now-dry-lubed chain > help? Could this have happened because I first used a degreaser -- to > get rid of that sticky stuff on the new chain -- before applying the > dry lube? No, I wouldn't expect it to cause skip. Did you make the chain the same length as previously?
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