Discussion:
Waterproof/oceanproof bike possible?
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S***@lani.pathlink.com
2004-01-17 02:58:32 UTC
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I live on the gulf coast and the salt air here is a mother on steel...

What options do I have as far as stainless and aluminum?

Thinking spokes and gears etc...

Is it possible to construct or buy a bike that shrugs off saltwater/salt
air?
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Rocketman
2004-01-17 10:07:25 UTC
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Post by S***@lani.pathlink.com
I live on the gulf coast and the salt air here is a mother on steel...
What options do I have as far as stainless and aluminum?
Thinking spokes and gears etc...
Is it possible to construct or buy a bike that shrugs off saltwater/salt
air?
Which parts of your bike are most affected by the salt spray? What
particular problems are you encountering? How much salt exposure does your
bike receive? How "oceanproof" do you need? Full submersion? For how long?

You could try the following:

Titanium frame (any brand: Habanero, Airborne, Litespeed, Merlin, etc, etc)
Chris King sealed stainless/aluminum headset
Wipperman stainless-steel chain (or IRD Teflon coated chain)
Stainless steel spokes and aluminum rims (the standard nowadays)
Sealed, waterproof aluminum hubs (Chris King)
Composite shifters (SRAM)
Composite rear derailleur (SRAM)
Carbon fiber seatpost (Easton, Kestrel)
Internally-geared rear hub (SRAM, Shimano, Rohloff)
Sealed cartridge BB (Truvativ, RaceFace)

These days, corrosion-proof materials like carbon fiber, titanium and
stainless steel are becoming more common, and affordable. The good stuff is
still very expensive; but you should be able to find something that will
work for you without mortgaging the house.

Rocketman


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DT
2004-02-06 15:14:14 UTC
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Well the easiest way around that is to go with an Al bike. As far as
parts go, if you want it really salt proof, your best bet is to go
with colored spokes as that will keep the salt away. If your on the
Gulf Coast, I imagine it's fairly flat and rolling terrain, so you
might look into a singlespeed or maybe a bike that can fit a Rolhoff
internally geared hub. For the chain, using a dry lube might work.

If your looking at actually constructing a bike, locate your favorite
custom bike builder and I'm sure they can come with some crazy ideas
to give you exactly what you want.

DT
Post by S***@lani.pathlink.com
I live on the gulf coast and the salt air here is a mother on steel...
What options do I have as far as stainless and aluminum?
Thinking spokes and gears etc...
Is it possible to construct or buy a bike that shrugs off saltwater/salt
air?
--
Skip
--
rec.bicycles.off-road is moderated by volunteers. To find help solving
posting problems, or contact the moderators, please see http://rbor.org/
Please read the charter before posting: http://rbor.org/rbor_charter.txt
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