I met a nice character a few weeks ago on a magnificent ride through the Bay Area. He rode a Colnago C-50 which was so filthy that I was unable to ascertain with any degree of certainty what color it was painted. I spent most of the ride suppressing the impulse to lead him and his bike through a local car wash. As it turns out, he’s based out of Asia, and the monsoon which is in full swing has the effect of turning white bikes black on the roads surrounding his adopted home of Hong Kong, which I always thought was an ape but apparently is also a city.
I’m what some people might call “obsessive” about keeping my bike clean. Even my Nine Bike gets a thorough washing if not after each ride, then at least after every other. A clean bike is easier to maintain, shifts more precisely, brakes better (if for some reason you want to go less fast), and the components wear more slowly. Not to mention that a clean bike is a beautiful bike. The secret to being able to clean your bikes often is a fifteen minute cleaning routine which I’ll detail another time. For now, lets leave it at having the right brushes and tools in place to quickly and easily get into all the hard-to-reach areas on a bike.
For many years, I assumed I had reached the high water mark in bike cleaning. Ego, it would seem, infects us all at one time or another. To quick I was to believe that cleanliness is godliness. There I sat, lonely upon my high horse of pride and arrogance, until my friend Charlie on Maui introduced me to a product called Pedro’s Bike Lust. And just like that, I was sent back to Earth in the knowledge that I still had much to learn.
This stuff is incredible; it sprays onto carbon, steel, aluminum, or rubber. It cleans and wipes off without leaving any residue. A little bit of rubbing and it brings out an as-new polished finish, covering and filling small scratches – it even diminishes the big scratches caused when, hypothetically speaking, your bike is blown over in the wind on Mount Saint Helens and scrapes along some jagged volcanic rocks. Hypothetically. I also spray it liberally on my saddle, which makes it very slippy and good for sliding forward and back as-needed for crushing fools.
At this point, I’m a complete junkie; I can hardly resist a little bump before each ride, just to get my head right and make my bike gleam beneath me as I set out on my ride. The only downside is the silicone-covered surface makes it harder for grit and mud to stick to the frame and show off how hard core your Rule #9 ride was.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Bike Lust/”/]
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I use Pledge wipes after a washing and in between washings. Lays down some wax to make cleaning easier, is pretty good at getting off road grime and grease off, even the white parts, and keeps the bike looking good. I'll check out Bike Lust.
@strathlubnaig
I don't know what a squiggle is, but apparently its about $0.50 US?
@Chris
Its called Bike Lust for a reason; my R3 was in the same state when I first used it and it was head and shoulders above all else I'd ever tried, including baby wipes. The little shallow scratches disappear.
@Steve G
The Pedros stuff also cleans in addition to shining. It's worth a shot anyway. I did have white cables for a while (not a design flaw as much as a thinking flaw) and the Bike Lust did clean them up nicely. But white chain stays...yikes.
@Owen
Where do you live, in the biblical middle east? I need to hear more about this bug infestation.
@Rhodri
Good point, I have sprayed it on the brake surface with abandon and the first stop is a hair-raiser although after that its gone and everything works as intended.
@Chris
Just say "No" to aerosols, we'd like to keep being able to ride outside, n'est pas?
@Roobar
That would be most disappointing.
@ErikdR
Well, it certainly made me more willing to spray it on my bike when Charlie showed me the bottle!
Sharp eye. Love how it looks in Cobble Crushing Mode. Can't wait for next Spring!
@VeloVita
Does that leave any residue? The great thing about this stuff is you can put it on everything without worry.
@David B, @Steve-o
I've not bought a Pledge product ever since seeing an episode of Antiques Road Show where the prunish guy said, "This dresser is worth $5,600 but you ruined it by spraying lemon Pledge on it." The facial expressions were priceless.
@frank
Eek. I'm from a more mountain bikey background and people won't even touch disk rotors for fear of getting something on them. If nothing else they squeal horribly. But that said I was never as careful with rim brakes and never noticed.
Come to think of it the disks on my cx-but-used-as-a-winter-road-bike seem far more prone to it with all the crap off the roads rather than the lovely cleansing exfoliating mud of off-road.
I use a commercial silicone polish (we had a million cans at work and were looking for a new home for some) and it works great. I do spray on a clean cloth first though.
I'd feel ashamed to ride a bike that was filthy and not working properly. I ride mostly by myself and if I ever went out with a filthy bike, that would be the ride that you meet up with other riders. They would take one look at the shit-encrusted bike and make scornful judgements. Considering I have Velominati decals on bikes 1-5, a filthy bike is not permissable. The only exception is if you AND the bike are covered in shite. That means you've been Rule 5-ing.
@frank
I remember an episode (I think it actually was in Seattle) and this snob had brought a lovely dresser into the venue to show off. He snootily declared that he had paid someone - a student I think - a couple of hundred bucks to "take off the ugly finish/color." That couple of hundred $$ cost him about $50k in value as it was the original patina/finish. The facial expression was indeed priceless . . .