How to clean casset...
 

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[Closed] How to clean cassettes?

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What is the best way to get a cassette looking like new again. I have heard you can leave it in a solution overnight, If so what does that solution consist of.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:53 am
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Degreaser?


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:54 am
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Any sort of degreaser... No moving parts, so just chuck it in a bath of your chosen cleaner. I'm using IPA at the moment, works well. Petrol, white spirit will also be fine. Leave it for 5 minutes, agitate with brush, refit.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:55 am
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What is IPA?


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:56 am
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Degreaser + old toothbrush = quick and easy.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:58 am
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What is IPA?

India Pale Ale, of course.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:58 am
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Strip it off the bike. Scrub with a toothbrush or similar with fairy liquid. No need for special degreasers if you don't already have any.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:00 am
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Remove. Jamjar of Petrol and toothbrush. Wipe down. Refit.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:01 am
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What njee20 said. I use white spirits.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:02 am
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Surely if people can see it you aren't riding fast enough?


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:04 am
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What is IPA?

Isopropyl Alcohol. Although I prefer otsdr's suggestion.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:05 am
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stick it in the dishwasher when your Mrs isn't around!


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:05 am
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How the **** do you fit a cassette in a jam jar?


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:07 am
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I just leave mine on the wheel and use a hand scrubbing brush i got from tesco for about £1 - bit of soapy water and then push against the freehub and roll it back, repeat until its clean. You wont get deep inside it without taking it off but this cleans the bits the chain touches and leaves it looking gleaming without using fancy chemicals


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:12 am
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I use diesel

Comes out like new with no scrubbing


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:13 am
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Warm soapy water and this brush work wonders; the bristles really get between the teeth. Much better than anything else I've used, including "proper" cassette cleaning brushes. I only ever take the cassette off and clean it if I'm changing hub bearings.

[edit] - what droppinneutron said

[url= https://c8.staticflickr.com/8/7634/27094945223_81dca7a366.jp g" target="_blank">https://c8.staticflickr.com/8/7634/27094945223_81dca7a366.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/HhhFeZ ]Cassette cleaning brush[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/stilltortoise/ ]stilltortoise[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:15 am
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Paraffin's another good one, cleans chains like a mofo and it's cheap and pretty reusable (you can let the dirt settle then pour off the clean fluid)


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:17 am
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Take wheel out of frame.
Spray with GT85/Muc-off/whatever I have to hand.
Leave it for 5 or 10 mins.
Another Spray.
Then use the edge of an old t-shirt of cloth to get between the cogs and clean it out.

Easy.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:17 am
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I bought a tupperwear type box from the supermarket that was big enough, chuck the cassette in with a decent amount of Gunk from Halfords and give it a good shake, if it's got a winters worth of wet lube and crap on it then I might leave it over night.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:19 am
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Easy.

You and I have different definitions of easy. This would rate as "faff" on my scale 😆


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:20 am
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I used to mess around with all sorts of cleaners and rags, but by far the best method for me is to take a sturdy brush and use soapy water with a dash of washing up liquid and car wash liquid thrown in.

Every few months, I remove the cassette and apply a thin coat of grease to the freehub splines and I'll chuck the cassette in the sink for a proper soak.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:23 am
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Bucket. Degreaser. Brush. I do the chain first then the cassette as the chain degreasing drips onto the cassette. I currently need to do it but after looking at the chain and cassette they're quite worn so I'll be "cleaning" them by lobbing them in the bin and fitting the spares I have.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:37 am
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Thanks for all the suggestions guys


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:37 am
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stick it in the dishwasher when your Mrs isn't around!

Phwaaaaaaaaaaaaaatttttttt! I push many boundaries in my house but that would get me a fair beasting by the current wife


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:46 am
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Take the cassette off the bike and put in a pan of white spirit or surgical alcohol; Then wipe it clean with a clean rag and wash it under a tap with water as hot as you can stand (means the water evaporates of more quickly); put back on the bike.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:49 am
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use Ultimate bike solution from scotoiler. Just wash the bike once in a while, comes up sparkly. doesn't appear to get gunk stuck to it.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:53 am
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I saw a tip on a GCN video that said one of those car cleaning noodle mitts does a good job at cleaning a cassette


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:54 am
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Not posh enough to own a dishwasher, but now and again it's nice to stand at the checkout in Sainsburys, with the rich and brandish a pack of dishwasher tabs.
Old plastic jug, half a dishwasher tab, pint or so of boiling water. Drop cassette, or component of choice in. Leave stand for ten mins, slosh it all about with an old pan scrubbing brush, pour away sludge, rinse well. Shake most of water off. Spray with gt85 to push the last of the water out . Dry. All sparkly and new looking.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 10:59 am
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power hose it off every month or so


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:01 am
 Yak
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After all that faff above - switch to wax lube, or at least for the summer - avoids all that oily gunk build-up.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:03 am
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5ltr bottle of 'No Nonsense' degreaser from Screwfix is cheap and effective. Did a batch of chains and cassettes yesterday - plastic tub and a toothbrush. Rinse with GT85


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:10 am
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Remove salt from dishwasher
Put any non-moving parts in
Run on a cycle
Cool
Refit


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:10 am
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@Yak. Good point.
I use dry lube all year round now. Doesnt seem to make stuff wear any quicker than usual and in spite of my cleaning method above. Very seldom needs doing to that extent.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:25 am
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I take off the wheel, spray WD40/GT85 at the cassette and the muck slides off and then gentle trickle of water.

Old rag on my chain after oiling so it doesn't pick the dirt up so easily.

Bike is filthy after 3 dry rides. My cassette is SRAM 11-42 X1 so cleaning it to save £££'s.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:34 am
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Remove and dismantle to component bits (if appropriate) and place on concrete in yard. Take pressure washer and blast it until spotless. You may need wellies on to stand on the bits to stop them flying into the next county. No chemicals needed. Comes up like new.

Otherwise keep chain clean by wiping off excess lube and it will stay pretty clean anyway.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:35 am
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"Petrol, white spirit will also be fine. "

Don't use petrol ffs. Really stupid idea. It may act as a good solvent, but it's ****ing dangerous especially indoors.

Concentrated industrial detergent diluted down a bit. Don't waste money on Muc-Off or any 'bike' cleaning products, utter rip-off.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 11:50 am
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Carb cleaner, but use in a well ventilated area and don't sray it near anything you might like to keep grease in.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 12:16 pm
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I just use spray degreaser, agitate using a paintbrush by back pedalling, hose down.

Doesn't keep it 100% "as new" shiny, but clean enough to avoid excessive wear/noise/abuse from bike shops and ends up pretty shiney, plus takes hardly any time.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 12:26 pm
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[img] [/img]

Job done......

(i suspect our younger readers have no idea what that^^ actually is 😆 )


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 12:31 pm
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I love this stuff.
http://www.sailandski.co.uk/acatalog/Fenwicks-Foaming-Chain-Cleaner-500ml--31877.html?gclid=CLjWyajJrM0CFfEV0wodcsoPGQ
Easy works great. Spray it on leave 10 mins and hose off! That's chain and cassette like new 🙂
Might take a couple of goes to start with or a good brush scrub


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 12:45 pm
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Cleaning your chain and cassette is a bit like cleaning your favourite Tea mug. All it needs is a light clean to get read of the top layer of clart, leave the rest as is or it'll never be the same.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 12:57 pm
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Agree with Stevet1. I remove wheel, spin and spray with a bit of GT85 type-lube; then get an old rag and fold in half, run the fold back and forth through the gaps. The cassette will spin as you clean, whole thing takes 2 mins.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 1:12 pm
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Bit of water, then Muc Off chain cleaner with a scrub from the Muc Off claw brush, followed by water rinse from bucket and drying from an old tea towel.

Having cleaned the chain with X3 cleaning tool, with water rinse and drying towel, chain and cassette get Prolink Pro Gold (or whatever it is called).


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 5:20 pm
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1. Use a wax lube like Squirt and it won't get so mucky in the first place 😉

2. Washing up bowl, water, dash of fairy liquid*. Soak, scrub, job done.

Not that I clean them like this very often. Only really if I have reason to take the cassette off and it's still good to use.

With Squirt lube a lot of the time, a quick hose down on the bike and the cassette and chain are shiny anyway.

* - yeah yeah, blah blah, salt in the stuff will eat it. Balls to that. Never had a problem in the years I've been doing it.

p.s....

3. Stop cleaning your bike/components so much. Just ride it. 😛


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 5:58 pm
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How the **** do you fit a cassette in a jam jar?

Use smaller cogs and HTFU


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 6:04 pm
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[s]Broken hacksaw blade[/s] offcut of 2mm alluminium sheet for poking out bits of grass, twigs, mud, etc.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 6:38 pm
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I do like Squirt...

I use the kitchen degreasing machine, just make sure that the plates aren't underneath.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 6:51 pm
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Spray degreaser of choice on, leave for a couple of minutes and brush it a bit.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 8:05 pm
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Cleaning your chain and cassette is a bit like cleaning your favourite Tea mug

quick rinse under the cold tap then ?


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 8:31 pm
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Remove cassette. Put in parts washer at work. Job done.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 8:35 pm
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Dishwasher!


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:45 pm
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IPA on the heads and capstan rollers. Allow to dry.


 
Posted : 16/06/2016 9:52 pm
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I found mine comes up functionally clean (greasy looking, but with all the dirt and excess oil gone) using only my trusty plant sprayer and *very hot* water. About 60c and set the nozzle to a mist setting, then hold the nozzle really close - the speed of the hot water jet just peels the accumulated smegs off leaving only the oil residue (probably useful).

No chemicals, less chance of contaminating the hub grease and less rust spots from overcleaning.

For a reasonably eco friendly grease, just use melted candle wax with a spray of gt85 on the mechs and perhaps a little on the chain. Obvs this comes off really easily with hot water, so...


 
Posted : 17/06/2016 6:49 am
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I normally spray with GT40 or similar then run a rag/edge of an old towel back and forth between the gaps -takes two mins and comes up like new.

To clean the chain I'll normally soak with GT40, run through a towel to clean off the dirt then re-grease.
occasionally i'll take it off and give it a proper wash with white spirit.

I don't buy any fancy bike cleaning products - all a bit of a waste of money in my opinion.


 
Posted : 17/06/2016 8:43 am

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