Oh my!Emo Rider, other readers will be very bored by now but you questioned my statement:
This is what you said:
As if to suggest that you disagree, you explained that WD-40 includes an oil:
So, just to be clear, while you may be happy to use GT85 and WD-40, I'm fine with your choice there if that suits your purpose. If you wish to contend, however, that WD-40 is a lubricant, then I'm afraid that is a very tenuous description of what that product is designed to do.
Tom
I think we have a new subject that can run & run.
Emo Rider, now you are simply being insulting.Oh my!
I do not know for what deluded purpose this poster wants me to say that WD40 is not a lubricant but that is not going to happen now or ever.
Now I do use it to clean up my black & oily hands, it get the muck lifted and then allows soap to do the rest. Soap on oily hands doesn't work as well on its own.+1 Tom on WD40. Great for curing squeaky doors hinges and that's about it.
The stuff has had it's day and I wouldn't let any of it near my car or my bikes.
Try washing your hands in it. It'll dry your skin out well before lubricating it!
Best to get products suitable for the job in hand, be it lubricating, derusting, protecting rubber etc...
You are right on the button about door hinges, it's a temporary fix if there's nothing else to hand.Now I do use it to clean up my black & oily hands, it get the muck lifted and then allows soap to do the rest. Soap on oily hands doesn't work as well on its own.
Would not expect a good result on door hinges, use a silicone spray. Much cleaner & long lasting.
It is excellent for cleaning old transister radios and such like. It’s pretty good at drying out engine electrics too. I carried a can with me when I had a Mini many years ago. Heavy rain on a fast road with truck spray would get into the distributer and HT leads stuck out on the front of the block, and I’d be down to three cylinders after a short while. But a good spraying of WD 40 would get me going again quickly.+1 Tom on WD40. Great for curing squeaky doors hinges and that's about it.
The stuff has had it's day and I wouldn't let any of it near my car or my bikes.
Try washing your hands in it. It'll dry your skin out well before lubricating it!
Best to get products specific for the job in hand, be it lubricating, derusting, protecting rubber etc...
I think we have a new subject that can run & run.
Like you said flecc, like you said.As I said in reply number one in this thread:
"Opinions on what is best to use vary widely and it's a contentious subject."
since I knew what was going to follow!
.
I have no hesitation in seconding those comments Croxden. I'm a convert.Would not expect a good result on door hinges, use a silicone spray. Much cleaner & long lasting.
Indeed John! You have just described what WD-40 is all about.It is excellent for cleaning old transister radios and such like. It’s pretty good at drying out engine electrics too. I carried a can with me when I had a Mini many years ago. Heavy rain on a fast road with truck spray would get into the distributer and HT leads stuck out on the front of the block, and I’d be down to three cylinders after a short while. But a good spraying of WD 40 would get me going again quickly.
You can also polish your shoes with it.As the kitchen door hinges had begun to emit noises again, I fetched the silicone spray from my shed and as with my car, the noise has not, so far, returned. Clean to use, effective - I like it!
Tom
Minis had more than 3 cylinders?It is excellent for cleaning old transister radios and such like. It’s pretty good at drying out engine electrics too. I carried a can with me when I had a Mini many years ago. Heavy rain on a fast road with truck spray would get into the distributer and HT leads stuck out on the front of the block, and I’d be down to three cylinders after a short while. But a good spraying of WD 40 would get me going again quickly.
Living in Bournemouth and regularly cycling along the long promenade from Sandbanks to Christchurch often with wind blowing sand about, on earlier bikes i had exactly your experience with wet lubes. After failing to find GT85 much use (my earlier post) I switched to dry lube, a I do find that with that not only have the chains lasted much longer, but you don't end up with grinding paste. The wax picks up sand/dust but tends to drop off. Evidence of this is that along the rear frame below the chain, black spots of the wax appear. Only downside is that you have to regularly apply the lube.I thought I'd give modern bicycle chain lubricants a try, so I got a bottle of White Lightning Wet Ride because I ride in the wet a lot. I can't say that it stayed on any better than anything else, so I had mixed feelings about it until I took my wheel off a couple of days ago. The derailleur was caked in thick black gritty grease, like valve grinding .