Definitely not corrosion, I can remove it with my fingernail. The Chain is about a week old. I'm just dregreasing it and the cassette to get a wax lube applied.My Aventure.2 chain was terrible and wore out in like 350 miles (and to prove I'm not bad at chain maintenance, a SRAM chain on my Tero X lasted 1500 miles).
That said, that looks like corrosion, not a coating.
My Aventure.2 chain was terrible and wore out in like 350 miles (and to prove I'm not bad at chain maintenance, a SRAM chain on my Tero X lasted 1500 miles).
That said, that looks like corrosion, not a coating.
That looks like an entry level KMC Z8.1 CHAIN.
KMC e series for any ebike.Definitely not corrosion, I can remove it with my fingernail. The Chain is about a week old. I'm just dregreasing it and the cassette to get a wax lube applied.
"eBike chain are coated with KMC’s latest breakthrough in rust protection. EcoProteQ treatment doubles the rust resistance compared to the RB treatment. Benefits of the smoother coating are less noise, great performance, maximum rust resistance and great look."
My Aventon chain looks like yours but with no rust. I get 150 to 300 miles per charge, so I guess I pedal harder than most. At 1,000 miles I checked the pitch. It's still slightly under 1/2 inch.My KMC chain has the same coating,..
My e-bike has 2400 km on it but the chain has less than 50 km. (I don't pedal.)
The bike has only been in light rain twice and washed once.
I thought it was some sort of galvanized chain but maybe it's just primer?
I think primer might work better?
I cleaned and hot waxed my chain when it was new, and again about 400 km ago.
My Aventon chain looks like yours but with no rust.
,.. I'd found that Finish Line Dry Lube, applied to each end of each pin,..
I don't remove the chain to use Finish Line. The first time, when I'd ridden 14 months with oil, I used a paper towel to wipe off what oil and grit I could. Application took about 1 second on each side of each roller. The fluid looks clear on metal, but it caused black stuff to run out of the joints, which I wiped off. It happened every time I applied it. For better rust protection, I learned to let the film dry before wiping. I also learned that when I poured it from the opaque bottle into the translucent applicator, I needed to make sure it was an opaque white; otherwise, it needed more shaking to mix the teflon with the vehicle.I removed my chain when the bike was new and gave it a hot wax treatment.
I removed all the oil with brake cleaner and acetone then "cooked" my chain on the stove.
I have a dedicated pot for chain maintenance now.
I just re-melt the wax and lube the chain once in a while.
The chain is easier to clean the second time when it's only dirt and old wax on the chain.
It looks like a real PITA to lube a chain, but it's not that bad.
I like the wax because I don't get oily crap all over my pants or hands when I mess with the chain.
Nope thats not what that is. I have KMC chains with and without that coating. Chains with that coating on look more like a dull, bare steel. Not shiny like a nickel-plated one.If that's a KMC chain, you're removing the protective layer.
"eBike chain are coated with KMC’s latest breakthrough in rust protection. EcoProteQ treatment doubles the rust resistance compared to the RB treatment. Benefits of the smoother coating are less noise, great performance, maximum rust resistance and great look."
^^^ this x 1000. I use Rock and Roll, which is a combination solvent and lubricant. Drip it over a length of the chain, keep a cloth towel under the chain to catch the excess drips, then wipe the chain. Do the top exposed chain and then the bottom (above the chainring and below it). Move to a new segment and repeat. Doing it both top and bottom for one rotation of the chain means I wipe every section of the chain twice. Takes me 10 minutes.Here we go again with the anal chain lubing that takes hours of your life to return maybe 0.34 extra miles of riding.... Maybe.
I get 3000mi out of a standard <$20 chain on a 750w and 1000w mid drives just reading the bottle of any lube and doing as instructed.. applying every few hundred miles.
I don't ride in a desert, but the soil here contains plenty of silt, defined as 4 to 63 microns, and clay, defined as being under 4 microns. Gritty dust accumulates on windowsills behind screens. It accumulates on my car in the carport. My vacuum cleaner picks up a lot of mineral dust.If I can ask a question,
Here in NV, and I am sure in any of the western desert states,
the microscopic dust is very mineralized, and gets into and on everything.
Your thoughts and suggestions........from the desert riders
ymmv.
…. I don't send it to the Vatican so it can be blessed by the Pope.
And if I add a racing stripe to my jersey thats another 10 . Shaving my legs is +5 but then I need to wear a bag over my head and thats -15.i have heard that a papal blessing is worth at least 3 or 4 watts