What do you use to clean your mountain bike?

What do you use to clean your mountain bike?

Author
Discussion

PurelyRetro

Original Poster:

7,211 posts

205 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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A sunny evening to you all,

I was wondering what was best to clean my mountain bike with?

Any suggestions?

Cheers

Big Chris

fadeaway

1,463 posts

227 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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Muc Off seem to have this pretty much covered

nessiemac

1,550 posts

242 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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Just simple hot soapy water always gets the mud and crap off..

PurelyRetro

Original Poster:

7,211 posts

205 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
quotequote all
nessiemac said:
Just simple hot soapy water always gets the mud and crap off..
I tend to use just hot water, but can it be damaging to the paint?

staceyb

7,107 posts

225 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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Jetwash, then oil everything that needs oiling.

nessiemac

1,550 posts

242 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
quotequote all
PurelyRetro said:
nessiemac said:
Just simple hot soapy water always gets the mud and crap off..
I tend to use just hot water, but can it be damaging to the paint?
Think it would have to be bloody hot to damage the paint! Just warm/hot water with a bit of car shampoo and a couple of sponges gets the the job done..never seen the point of all the expensive cleaners really.

Edited by nessiemac on Tuesday 26th May 20:05

The Count

3,268 posts

264 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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fadeaway said:
Muc Off seem to have this pretty much covered
I love Muc Off...it also works on thrush. smile


CooperS

4,507 posts

220 months

Tuesday 26th May 2009
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  • Spray off any loose dirt
  • Spray on Muc off
  • Spray
  • Then with a bucket of Megs (Car Washer) wash
  • Towel off
  • Degreese chain
  • lube chain
Then if im feeling abnormal clay and wax with Dodo Purple Hayze

Edited by CooperS on Wednesday 27th May 08:13

nessiemac

1,550 posts

242 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
quotequote all
CooperS said:
Then if im freeling abnormal clay and wax with Dodo Purple Hayze
Ermmm.........rofl

Edited by nessiemac on Wednesday 27th May 00:08

Lord Pikey

3,257 posts

216 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I have a mate who swears by GT85 mixed with fairy liquid.

Personally i stick to muck off and then fairy liquid on the stubborn bits.

LP

Pints

18,444 posts

195 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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staceyb said:
Jetwash, then oil everything that needs oiling.
You need to be careful with the jetwash as it's too easy to force water or other muck into sealed bearings and the like. If you must use a pressure washer, make sure it's set to very gentle, just to get the main crap off, before getting the job done by hand.

Fume troll

4,389 posts

213 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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Usually just a rinse off with a hose-brush thing. Pressure washers are okay so long as you are gentle and keep the nozzle quite far away from the bike. Everything's sealed on modern bikes anyway.

Muck off really cleans things up, but for a bike that gets dirty all the time there's not a lot of point. The only exception is if you want to get it really clean before putting on some wax / polish. This IS worth doing occasionally as it makes it easier to rinse off, and protects otherwise vulnerable areas from corrosion. Keep it off the brakes though!

Cheers,

FT.

WildCards

4,061 posts

218 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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Mud

Roman

2,031 posts

220 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I find a hand held pressurised garden sprayer like this is perfect:
http://www.gardencentreonline.co.uk/Garden-Waterin...

With some car shampoo added you can take it with you to wash down the bike before putting it back in the car.

Beyond Rational

3,524 posts

216 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I only wash the bike if it is really covered in wet mud. In that situation I use muc-off and a hose pipe.

Most of the time the mud has at least partially dried by the time I get home, so I just brush it off and maybe stick the chain and cassette in a bucket - I don't think getting the bike wet again does it any favours.

JM16v

2,649 posts

180 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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Muc-Off can damage your paint if you dont get it off straight away.
A similar thing is called Fenwicks, which you can buy a sachet or bottle of and dilute it or the normal 'mucoff' style bottle. Much kinder on your seals and paint and cleans well too.

I tend to use that if i can be bothered to wash it, i usually just use hose pipe and a brush, wait till it dries and then use a rag and GT85 to polish it up, avoiding the rotors

tom g

1,046 posts

196 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I jetwash for 2 minutes, then place in garage.

My deore groupset has survived 4 years of this treatment, so can't be too bad!

mk1fan

10,525 posts

226 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I've heard 'horror stories' about Fenicks cleaner being left too long on paint too.

Either work well as a spray on, short soak and then rinse off cleaner.

I prefer Megs Car Shampoo though, warm water and a soft brush. Car shampoos are very very mild detergents so don't damage surfaces or wash out oils. I use finish line degreaser if I need to clean the oily bits. I have a seperate disc cleaner for the stoppy bits.

JM16v

2,649 posts

180 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
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I never have, but then again I'd have to wash my bike

s4avant

196 posts

197 months

Thursday 28th May 2009
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Low pressure hose down, leave to drip dry for about 15 mins, lightly apply WD 40 to all moving parts ( except brakes) and wipe over frame with a rag to remove any surplus oil. Then specialist lube detailed areas such as the chain with Wet Lube or similar.
This seems to work fine for me and the WD 40 is much cheaper than many of the more specialist products.