03-24-2007, 11:17 AM | #11 |
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Bill, just reading your reply reminded me of a moment in life years ago with my first bike. A friend asked if he could take my bike for a spin around the block. He was gone for a good 15 minutes and came back looking quite happy with the adventure as it turned out to be. When I asked how he liked it, he really stunned me with his reply. He said " Everything works ". After checking over his bike I vowed never to ask for a test ride. Very little worked as intended or not at all, the front brakes were in the not at all category. Brakes aside, a little TLC would have made his riding more fun and relaxing. And he just did not have front brake shoes at all. Scary.
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03-24-2007, 12:10 PM | #12 |
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Water Warrior - That is scary but on the plus side you were able to learn the easy way. I make it a point of NEVER (this is one of the times when I will use that word) letting anyone ride my bike. Too much liability and I could lose the bike due to any number of reasons. I will also only ride a bike from a dealer and not a private individual for the reasons you note. The one exception is if I am testing it for possible purchase. First I start with checking that all the parts are secure and then check the brakes before going out on the road.
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03-25-2007, 12:44 PM | #13 | |
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Quote:
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03-25-2007, 12:56 PM | #14 | |
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I would think that cables that had Teflon sheaths would also need to be made of some sort of highly corrosion resistant metal (stainless steel) other wise the cable would corrode, bind and break in very short time. We lube cables not just to make the work smoothly but to repel moisture and reduce corrosion. |
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03-25-2007, 02:19 PM | #15 |
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BadBob, skeptics are good. You bring up a good point about the stainless material for cables. Stainless does not flex as well as normal materials so it would probably break sooner with use. Looks like I opened up a real can of worms here. Time to dig a little deeper into the teflon thing.
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03-25-2007, 09:39 PM | #16 |
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03-26-2007, 04:53 AM | #17 |
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BadBob, got a reply to an e-mail about the teflon lube question. This might shed some light on not lubing teflon. "The solvents used as carriers in a cable lube can attack and soften the teflon lining. There is no mention of lubing cables in the Suzuki service manual or any manual for any bike with teflon lined cables I've ever seen. Only the cable ends should be greased." That is what I got from my quiry. So I would guess that greasing levers is good on all bikes and lubing or not lubing metal sheathed cables is up to the individual. I would go with the lubing myself. And the teflon can just wear out at it's own pace. BadBob, glad you are a skeptic. I had not considered any solvents as carriers and their effect on teflon.
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