best chain for my RE Int 650


  • Looking to upgrade my chain, I live in a humid area on Vancouver Island and constantly need to scrub surface rust off my chain. Which is normal for being so close to the ocean, but its rather unpleasant to scrub off so much every 500kms. Was hoping someone in a similar climate knows a good upgrade. Also, which type of material should my chain be made of for wet, rainy, salty, humid conditions? Any brands or type of chain material suggestions are greatly appreciated. Its my daily ride, so I would like to upgrade this sooner rather than later. I feel like my chain doesn't hold lubrication very well due to the rain and when it gets close to 500kms without a thourough clean and lube, it starts to noticably feel shittier when downshifting. The bike is past 10,000kms and I have serviced everything myself so far. I also think my links just don't hold the 80w-90 gear oil very long with so much rain, so maybe I need to switch to something else in the future for a new chain lubricant that can hold up in my climate. Any reccomendations for that would also be a internet high five for your suggestions. 



  • @A-Dawg
    first, id stop "cleaning" your chain. a rinse with non salt water is fine. youre washing off and out all the lubrication. washing chains is for guys who get DIRT and sand all up in the chain when offroad. why in gods name are you putting 8090 gear oil on your chain and not an actual chain lubricant? Thats why youre getting rust on your chain so frequently, your chain is tossing that oil off like awater off a ducks back as soon as you get going. So stop using gear oil and go get a GOOD chain lube like the ones made by belray. i prefer their super clean chain lube. 
    SO heres the drill - go buy a good  X-ring chain by DID or RK. they hold lubrication inside much better than an O-ring chain. 

    Next, after you install the new chain,  lubricate that chain with actual chain lubricant, spray it on the lower part of the chain so you are spraying onto the surface that contacts the sprockets, roll the bike forward, spray on the next section, dont be shy. repeat process till chain is covered.  let the bike sit for half an hour, longer if its cold out, before you ride it, if you are riding every day and the bike is stored o utdoors, a light spray every couple weelks shoudl drastically prolong the life of the chain. i lived in huntington beach with chain drive bikes and my chains lasted a long time with regular care. as long as you dont go dirt bike riding for miles, you dont need to be cleaning the chain. 

     


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