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7 Comments

  1. Prestigious-Fig-5513 on

    Hotter means more drips off before solidifying, meaning the wax coating is thinner meaning you won’t get as many wear free miles.

  2. Gummybearn1nja on

    It lasts much longer if you pull it out at a cooler temp. When you pull it out when it is still super runny, the wax can leave the areas where you need it (in between the rollers and the plates). If you pull it out when it is thick, the wax has a much harder time running away as it’s hardening.

    Also: silca makes more money if the wax sticks to the plates on the outside and goes to waste ;P

  3. Max-entropy999 on

    Yes you want a bit of excess that shows the wax is solidifying in the joints. A nice thing to do is to drop your chain on a few sheets of kitchen papers and then rub it around a bit with another few bits of kitchen paper, keep it moving and as it cools the wax will come off the side plates. Keep it moving or else it will stick to the paper. Get it right and the chain is clean as it gets.

  4. BicycleBruce on

    I think Silica just wants to sell you more wax. When waxing, mine typically look like the one on the left (90c) I rotated 2 SRAM 12 speed chains every 400-500km and they lasted over 9,000km each before needing to be changed.

  5. I always put it on 100 C. So is that too hot? Whats the ideal temperature? Should I go to 100 for around 15 minutes and then let it cool down to around 70?

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