|
These steps will help you to prepare a bike for a rainy
winter, a particularly wet climate, or if most of your riding is done
off-road. The mud, sand, and water that your wheels spray up into every
part of the bike combine to form a damaging, grinding paste. Salt, if
used to treat roads where ice is likely to occur, will quickly corrode
your bike.
Regular cleaning and lubricating helps with protection, but try to
stop the mud and salt from reaching the delicate parts of the bike in
the first place. The overall aim when protecting a bike in wet weather
is to prevent water from reaching the interior parts and washing the
lubricant off the exposed parts.
|
We have two Lubricant Shops that feature every major, modern lubricant in the bicycle industry:
Lubricant Shop 1
Lubricant Shop 2
|
Protecting a bike:
Fit mudguards, inserts, seals and lubricate the exposed parts to protect
them from wet conditions.
|
Shielding exposed components
Sealing the seat post collar
Keep water out of the point where the seat pin enters the frame. Mark
this junction and remove the pin. Pull a piece of narrow road-bike inner
tube over the frame. Insert the pin through the tube to the mark and
tie-wrap the tube to secure it.
|
Sealing the headset
Place a cover over the headset to provide protection. You can fit a
protector to the headset without removing any components by simply fastening
the velcro. |
Fitting mudguards
Fasten a mudguard to the seat pin and you will block
much of the spray from the back wheel. For the front wheel, fit a guard
that clips onto the frame and is secured in place with tie-wraps. Full
mudguards, which attach to the fork and rear dropout, give almost full
protection for on-road biking but get clogged up off-road.
|
Weatherproofing the drivetrain
Cleaning and lubricating the chain
Lubricate and clean your chain as often as you do
in summer and after every wet ride. Apply the same light lubricant that
you use in the summer and then apply a heavier oil, which will not wash
off as easily. Only coat the rollers and insides of each link with heavier
oil because it attracts more dirt. |
Cleaning and lubricating derailleurs
Dribble oil on to the pivots around which the front
and rear derailleurs move. Use a heavier, wet oil rather than the oil
you would normally apply during the summer. Every time you dribble oil
like this, first flush out the old oil by dribbling some degreaser onto
the pivots and letting it sink in for a few minutes. |
Cleaning and lubricating pedals
Apply
heavier, wet oil to lubricate the retention mechanism
of clipless pedals after degreasing all the moving parts. The heavier oil
will not wash off as easily as dry oil. Regularly clean off old oil with
degreaser and apply new oil in order to prevent the accumulation of grit
and the consequent increase in pedal wear. |