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10 Comments

  1. Yeah, umm, don’t leave your bike in the rain for days. You should be concerned about what isn’t coming out. The water in your hubs and bearings will not be good at all.

  2. baconbananapancake on

    Yes you should, WD40 dissolves grease. If it rains and there’s still WD40 in the frame it basically flushes out all the gunk, but might also go into your bearings and other areas washing away the grease.

  3. RooibosContactHigh on

    Likely that water is getting into your hubs somehow, although I’ve never seen latte coloured ooze before.

    1. Don’t leave your bike outside. If you have to, buy a cover for it.
    2. Service your hubs, regrease them and make sure the seals are in good condition and fitted properly.

  4. Yeah, it’s not good to have water inside your frame. There could be more lurking near where the chain stays and BB shell are joined. Lift the bike so the holes are the lowest point and try to get more out. Keep your bike out of the rain and spray some fluid film or frame saver inside your frame.

  5. Just to clarify: the juice isn’t coming from the hubs. It’s coming from the little holes near the dropouts! And I did drain the WD40 from the frame after I did the inside coating.

  6. Mountainfungi78 on

    Whatcha got right ‘ere is a blown head gasket. That juice is the coolant and oil mixin’ together. Not good.

    /s just in case

  7. simplejackbikes on

    WD-40 stands for “water displacer, 40th formulation”

    Contrary to popular belief, it is not a lubricant nor a rust protection. It is however great at stripping away actual lubricants and/or rust protection.

    Frames should be internally treated with an actual rust protection. DINITROL is a product designed for cars but can also be used on bikes. It is pretty nasty though. Recently I have been using Muc off HB-1 to treat frames and it seems to do a good job, while being less of a mess.

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