Douglas, Care to elaborate on the toxicity of framesaver? Thanks Tom R
> FrameSavingBOBs,
>
> I'm going to go out on a limb here...
> I don't leave my bikes out in the rain and while I ride in
> the rain, it is with fenders and I get to bring the bike into
> the dry and wipe it off before I go inside. Now
> I think that with a proper fendered bike in rainy weather zones
> FrameSaver, etc, is not worth the toxicity
> and the mess. FrameSaver proper is VERY nasty stuff, very
toxic.
> I think it's not good to be around. Other stuff may be less
yucky
> but dang if it isn't messy too. I can tell you that Jim
Cunningham
> doesn't use it and that other masterbuilders have told me the
same
> thing, that it's not critical.
> I have several 25+ year old bikes, none are rusted, none from
> the inside out. ALL have seen crappy weather and bad days.
> So, my two cents is that I was on this wagon and now am
> happy to be off: experience suggests that the problem is not
> a problem for me and that the costs, environmentally (to MY
environment)
> are not ones I want to accept.
>
> rust never sleeps, etc., but methinks this is
> not the issue some think it is, but of course you may
> have a very different experience and have bikes in MUCH wetter
> climes without being able to wipe them down, so to each his/her
own,
> Douglas Brooks
> Canandaigua, NY
>
> > Warren:
> >
> > Framesaver. Nothing else comes close as far as
tenaciousness......
> >
> > (I suspect that it's repackaged Waxoyl.....)
> >
> > Chris Beyer
> > Bloomfield, NJ
> >
> > Warren Young wrote:
> >
> > > Whatt are you folks using to coat the inside of your
frames? Motor
> > > oil...white grease...crisco? What's your favourite
procedure?
> > >
> > > TIA
> > >
> > > Warren Young