redridernl
Well-known member
I spray it on a shop towel and wipe the rim.
so how did it go?
Kerosene found in the camping section of CT successfully, many thanks!
I'm the OP btw. So, after reading everything and taking into account all of your advice and all, I can't wait to finish work and get on with my first cleaning Here's what I'll do as a first-time wash, basic washing, here's the new sequence:
1) Wash bike with just plain water from the garden hose
2) Dry the bike with some clothes and leaf blower
3) Put nitrile gloves on my hands
4) Soak a shop towel with kerosene
5) Use it to wipe the chain
6) Use clean shop towels to wipe off the dirt and kerosene from the chain
7) Soak another towel with WD40 and use it to wipe the wheels
8) Warm up the bike by riding it for 20 or so minutes
9) Lube the chain
10) let sit overnight
How does that sound?
This is what I do...
Cleaning Bike
1. Hose your bike down with water
2. Take 2 buckets of water, 1 containing your soap and 1 containing pure water
3. Wash your bike with container #1 and rinse off the sponge every now and then in container #2 (prevents getting any rocks or sand being embedded in the sponge and scratching your paint job)
4. Clean wheels using a sponge, toothbrush for small crevices and spraybottle with soap
5. Rinse Clean using a hose
6. Use a shammy or waffleweave microfibre to dry up the bike
7. At this point, you can apply your scratch removal compound (if necessary), polish and wax and wax again for better protection and shine or you can skip this (done every month or other month depending on how good your wax is)
Lube Chain
1. Lay out some cardboard over the ground and roll your chain area over it
2. Put your bike onto a rear wheel spool stand or whatever you use to elevate the rear wheel
3. Clean chain by putting your kerosene in a dollar store spray bottle and spritzing the chain while scrubbing it with a toothbrush
4. Roll wheel, rinse and repeat until you have gone through the entire chain -- Make sure you get both the top and bottom of the chain
5. Spray another coat on the chain and wipe off excess with a shop towel. No need to run it as it should be fairly lubricated and even due to wiping it off.
Clean Wheels (I don't normally do this)
1. Put front wheel on a stand as well as rear wheel
2. Wheel's should've been cleaned when you wash your bike (make sure to get nooks and cranny with a different toothbrush when cleaning rims)
3. Spray WD40 on a shop towel and wipe the wheel evenly