|
cleaning the bike
The commune is setting up a bike maintenance
station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 |
cleaning the bike
On Wed, 14 Nov 2018 23:43:17 +0100, Emanuel Berg
wrote: The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? Well, the seals on bicycle wheels and the old traditional square tapered shaft bottom brackets are not 100% sealed so I'd be a bit apprehensive to wash the bike with a strong water spray. Say a power washer, and if I washed a chain with soap and water I believe the step #2 would be to re-lubricate the chain. cheers, John B. |
cleaning the bike
On 2018-11-14 14:43, Emanuel Berg wrote:
The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? Clean the bike? Why? It ain't Christmas yet. The last time my bikes have seen water and a sponge was, ahm, well, I can't even remember. I found that after dried mud reaches a certain thickness it falls off by itself or washes off during the next rainy ride. So in essence the bikes clean themselves. Similar with my car. Only my wife washes hers regularly. I guess women are different. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
cleaning the bike
On 11/14/2018 4:43 PM, Emanuel Berg wrote:
The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? The pithy Jim Mateja, car editor, Chicago Tribune: Q What should I use to clean my vehicle? A Teenagers. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
cleaning the bike
Joerg: That's what I thought as well!
|
cleaning the bike
On Wednesday, November 14, 2018 at 3:02:35 PM UTC-8, John B. slocomb wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2018 23:43:17 +0100, Emanuel Berg wrote: The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? Well, the seals on bicycle wheels and the old traditional square tapered shaft bottom brackets are not 100% sealed so I'd be a bit apprehensive to wash the bike with a strong water spray. Say a power washer, and if I washed a chain with soap and water I believe the step #2 would be to re-lubricate the chain. For modern bikes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ei8Kt2bfEE I have the Feedback washstand. https://www.biketiresdirect.com/prod...e/ffspr2-1.jpg -- which I got super-cheap on sale. It's great for washing road bikes. Spray and spin. I would hesitate spraying down an old open bearing bike. Hub seals on old bikes were just dust caps. Shimano came up with mechanical seals for their hubs probably in the '80s. I'd just wipe down anything made before the '80s.. Campy pedals always had labyrinth seals and current Shimano SPDs have incredibly good labyrinth seals. I've ridden a set for years in sloppy weather, opened them up and the grease is still clean. You can blast those with a hose. The commune's bike cleaning center needs to have a bucket and lots of brushes and some good biodegradable detergent -- and a work stand and shop with lots of grease and oil for apres cleaning. I rarely clean my commuter, but it is a necessary exercise because it will just stop working if it gets too dirty -- and it is usually when I discover something is broken. -- Jay Beattie. |
cleaning the bike
On 11/14/2018 6:29 PM, AMuzi wrote:
On 11/14/2018 4:43 PM, Emanuel Berg wrote: The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? The pithy Jim Mateja, car editor, Chicago Tribune: QÂ* What should I use to clean my vehicle? AÂ* Teenagers. That's what I use for cutting my lawn. Works well enough for me! -- - Frank Krygowski |
cleaning the bike
Jay: I think it is a work in process at this point.
Video: Wow, he works fast! Why is it necessary to remove the wheels tho? |
cleaning the bike
On Thursday, November 15, 2018 at 2:28:18 AM UTC+1, jbeattie wrote:
On Wednesday, November 14, 2018 at 3:02:35 PM UTC-8, John B. slocomb wrote: On Wed, 14 Nov 2018 23:43:17 +0100, Emanuel Berg wrote: The commune is setting up a bike maintenance station. There are no tools so far, or perhaps because it is open 24/7 so if there were they would disappear. But there is a strong light (to examine the bike and do repairs), air, and water with a strong beam to clean the bike. There is where I'm a bit hesitant, don't you flush away grease in layers and get water into the the chain, and wash away lube? About the layers in modern bikes, are they "machine layers" (?), i.e. sealed in a small cylinders or discs, or are they open as in old bikes with or without retainers? Should you clean your bike with that much force and water? Well, the seals on bicycle wheels and the old traditional square tapered shaft bottom brackets are not 100% sealed so I'd be a bit apprehensive to wash the bike with a strong water spray. Say a power washer, and if I washed a chain with soap and water I believe the step #2 would be to re-lubricate the chain. For modern bikes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ei8Kt2bfEE I have the Feedback washstand. Hmm, first clean the greasy chain with the brush and than the other parts. I would do that in a different order or better use a different brush. https://photos.app.goo.gl/XygcNrCuhwAsMGZAA Lou |
cleaning the bike
Joerg, 2018-11-15 00:12+0100:
Clean the bike? Why? It ain't Christmas yet. The last time my bikes have seen water and a sponge was, ahm, well, I can't even remember. I found that after dried mud reaches a certain thickness it falls off by itself or washes off during the next rainy ride. So in essence the bikes clean themselves. Similar with my car. Only my wife washes hers regularly. I guess women are different. I concur, being in the exact same situation, except my wife just wants to wash her bike, but never took time to do so. I am not reminding her, as I think there are really more useful ways to spend one's time. And by no means, is she getting anywhere near my bike with water, sponge or brush! -- Tanguy |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:48 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
CycleBanter.com