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Chain lube, What do you use?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gerry
  • Start date Start date
G

Gerry

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I used chain wax on a o-ring chain one year. When I went to clean it I found more dirt and the thing seemed to be full of kinks. This was a new chain and the dealership recommended the chain wax. After cleaning, the chain seemed fine. The next summer and every one after that (5 years) I used lube from a can. I think the can lube is better than the wax but maybe I didn't give the wax a chance. I now read in the bike mags that they just love the wax. I wonder if this is because they don't have the bikes long and don't really know how the wax works compared to can lube over time. I also wonder if the life of the chain is reduced with one or the other.
So my question is, what do you use on your o-ring chain and what do you think of the other stuff?

(Sorry no shafts allowed :lol: :lol: )


Gerry
 
I just oil my Oring chain on the 1100 often and it almost never seems to wear. I use half and half motor oil and STP or whatever motor honey i can find.
No Gerry a motor honey is not what you are about to reply about. :lol: :lol:
 
Buddy from the local Suzuki shop recommended Honda chain lube. It sprays on and dries, leaving a coating on the chain. As you ride, the chain warms up and the coating liquifies again to keep the chain lube. When you stop, it cools back down and solidifies again. I really liked the stuff on my 550, and it didn't seem to pick up too much dirt. It was definitely better than 30W motor oil, and not as messy. It does fling off like motor oil will.
 
PJ Blue Label. I've tried various other stuff but that's by far the best I've used.
 
brs127s said:
Buddy from the local Suzuki shop recommended Honda chain lube. It sprays on and dries, leaving a coating on the chain. As you ride, the chain warms up and the coating liquifies again to keep the chain lube. When you stop, it cools back down and solidifies again. I really liked the stuff on my 550, and it didn't seem to pick up too much dirt. It was definitely better than 30W motor oil, and not as messy. It does fling off like motor oil will.
I wonder what holds it to the chain when it liquifies.???
 
TEMS said:
PJ Blue Label. I've tried various other stuff but that's by far the best I've used.

Ditto here. Motorcycle Consumer News, rated it the second highest behind the PJ1 Black Label. I use the Blue label because it is formulated for o-ring chains while the Black label, which can be used for o-ring chains, is intended for general chain use.

Hap
 
I use Silkolene at the moment, but it is a non-oring chain. I also have a chain case so the lube does not attract dirt or exposed to water.

Most peple probably dont keep the bike long enough to have to clean out all the built up gunge!!!

(and yes no more shaft drive snide remaks please :)
 
I've been using synthetic "Chain Guard" for about a year and am really happy with it. It sprays on like a light oil and sets up to a waxy grease.
It takes very little to make for a slippery chain and it doest throw off much at all.

Earl
 
saaz said:
(and yes no more shaft drive snide remaks please :)

you take all the fun out of it. :(
on my one chain driven bike, and on my former bikes that had chains, I use/used PJ1 blue label, good stuff, one thing I found interesting about it is it contains spermoil. 8O wonder how they get that :roll: :twisted:
 
saaz: You mentioned a chain case. Is it homemade? I need one really badly for my 400.

Thanks, Steve
 
Scotty,

The Honda lube stayed on very well even when it liquified. When I would shut the bike down, and the chain cooled down, it would solidify again and form the wax-like coating again.
 
It really doesn't matter! As long as you keep the chain clean, lube it often and keep it adjusted.
 
I use castrol and when I can't find that I use gunk. Both seem to work well and if I spray it on after a ride and let it sit overnight neither will fling off the next day.
 
Buddy from the local Suzuki shop recommended Honda chain lube. It sprays on and dries, leaving a coating on the chain. As you ride, the chain warms up and the coating liquifies again to keep the chain lube. When you stop, it cools back down and solidifies again.

Believe it or not that is the theory behind chain wax.
 
If I remember correctly(I sold my 550 over a year ago and everything went with it. Plus the 850 is a shaft), the Honda Lube also had Teflon in it. I am not sure. Also, it dried within 30 minutes of application or cooling down of the chain.
 
It would seem that chain wax is very well liked. I'll have to give it an other chance only this time I won't use so much.(I think that's what I did wrong) Thanks for all the great input, as per usual this site rocks :lol: .

Gerry
 
I started using Tri-flon shortly after buying my GS1000 new. The original chain went 44,000 miles.
 
Lube properties????

Lube properties????

slopoke said:
brs127s said:
Buddy from the local Suzuki shop recommended Honda chain lube. It sprays on and dries, leaving a coating on the chain. As you ride, the chain warms up and the coating liquifies again to keep the chain lube. When you stop, it cools back down and solidifies again. I really liked the stuff on my 550, and it didn't seem to pick up too much dirt. It was definitely better than 30W motor oil, and not as messy. It does fling off like motor oil will.
I wonder what holds it to the chain when it liquifies.???
I think when they refer to liquifying ,perhaps they're thinking the grease viscosity changes in the same way as motor oil changes viscosity as the temperature changes.
Remember how these lubes work...they have a grease suspended in a solvent base. As the spray hits the chain the mixture works its way into tiny spots in the same way as gasoline seems to go everywhere then the solvent evaporates leaving the grease in places that grease alone could not get to.
Rick.........
 
Im just a die hard about soaking a chain and also squirting a couple of shots of oil on it before every ride. If the spray stuff works then it must be ok.
 
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