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On quads and dirtbikes?

2006-08-20 08:33:56 · 34 answers · asked by ♥monamarie♥ 5 in Cars & Transportation Motorcycles

34 answers

WD 40 is a degreaser. This is great for getting the dirty grease and grime off your chain, however after it is clean, you should use some white grease to lubricate the chain.

2006-08-20 08:39:01 · answer #1 · answered by capollar 4 · 1 0

NO! Despite what Redneck Logic tells you, WD-40 is NOT a lubricant. It is a water displacement product (hence the WD), and has a low surface tension to get into rusted parts as well. As a lubricant, it will only fly off and will give you all the protection of vegetable oil.

Most motorcycle/ATV/quad chains are an O-ring type, which means that every single link has two small O-rings between the plates to keep the factory grease INSIDE the chain. Once those O-rings go, dirt, mud, water and other junk gets inside the link and destroy it, and your chain will probably break soon after.

You need a lube that will keep the O-rings soft and resist the elements. Go to a motorcycle shop and get some real lubricant! PJ-1 is a popular off-road lube, and Bel-Ray, Maxima and Silkolene are also good. $9 for a can of lube is cheaper than $70 for a chain!

2006-08-21 02:34:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

WD-40 will only loosen the dirt on the chain to lubricate it properly you should use a small amount of light machine oil (3 in 1 is okay) - engine oil will do if you have nothing else though. Do not use too much though otherwise it will spray everywhere when you start the motor

2006-08-20 08:41:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

short answer is not any. do no longer use WD40 for something yet cleansing a chain. WD40 isn't a lubricant, rather it rather is a solvent that is composed of kerosene that makes it sense oily. That being stated, it rather is high quality for issues like doorknobs or hinges the place there is little or no stress on the shifting aspects. A bicycle chain demands a lubricant that performs under severe stress and does not p.c.. up airborne dirt and dirt. This regulations out 3 in a million oil, graphite, motor oil, lithium, or something like that. rather, the terrific stuff to apply is a teflon or wax based lubricant. you will get the stuff in little bottles for some money at a motorcycle keep. once you're arranged to lubricate, clean the chain with your WD40, wipe it down thoroughly, then stick to the final lubricant. in case you holiday in basic terms recreationally and on the line you may lube each and every 2 weeks of using. in case you holiday interior the airborne dirt and dirt or on trails you may could clean and lube as much as each and every holiday finding on the severity of the circumstances. keep in mind that the chain is your merelycontinual. If it rather is not any longer working at height performance then you certainly are dropping your power and detrimental the relax aspects of the drivetrain.

2016-09-29 11:49:49 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I use WD-40 after cleaning the chain to disperse water, so the chain does not rust, then wipe it down. Since I run an o-ring chain, I don't use any other lubricant as that causes dirt to stick to the rollers and prematurely wears the sprockets.

2006-08-21 03:12:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. WD 40 is not a lubricant. While is will do for a temporary fix, you need to use chain wax or a lube made specificly for chains.

2006-08-20 11:23:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No! Do not use WD-40, it's a penetrating oil, it will come off in the rain and mud. Check out the link below to find the best synthetic lube to use.

It's water proof and is used on the racing circuit.

2006-08-20 08:51:22 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

NO, don't use WD-40. The cheapest thing that will work great is to get a bottle of 90W gear oil ahd put it on your chain with a small paint brush

2006-08-21 03:01:54 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Allot of pros use it. But they get new chains all the time. I would suggest a chain lube that wont fly off unless your spraying the chain every 6 laps. But yea you can use WD. I use it all over after hosing off the bike.

2006-08-20 14:42:00 · answer #9 · answered by toad 1 · 0 0

I could see using it to clean the chain, but for lubrication I would stick with an oil specified for lubricating chains.

2006-08-20 12:45:54 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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