DISCLAIMER- I did this to satisfy my own curiosity- and am happy with results. Constructive comments and criticism or sharing of experience welcome. Burning at stake for committing of sacrilege on a Rohloff bike not so welcome
So I bought a 10 year old Rohloff hub bike in October last year as a treat to motivate me to ride more often after suffering a stroke. As bike was not full price or fault free, and having diced with death in March 2019, my fear of breaking expensive things is less than had I paid for the bike new. My curiosity to tinker for solutions has grown exponentially as I put on some km on that hub of mine.
After around 500km from purchasing the bike I reversed the rear cog having fashioned a cog remover from a pipe fitting and I fitted a Wipperman Connex X8 chain on it's factory lube. I think I managed about 800km on factory lube despite autumn/winter commutes partially on forest paths, but at some point I had to oil the chain. I'm sure with the same chain on my derailleur bikes that this was probably double what they would have managed. But the Rohloff, partially weather protected by a chain-guard did pretty well till that point.
The winter progressed, and my forest short cut messier, so I oiled the traditional way with chain oil, and a wipe with a cloth. And also experimented with bearing grease instead of oil- as recommended by a couple of local bike shops as better for sub-zero riding. The next 2000km on the chain were more traditional but a fairly messy affair. As my trouser legs and my oily rag would testify, both oil and grease worked, but the chain was quickly filthy, and needed regular cleaning before re-lubing.
And then I found a packet of 50 candles from Ikea in my basement...
I removed the Connex X8 with its great quick link system in seconds. Using terps, I gave the chain a good degrease first. Using an old saucepan on my hob, I melted around 10 mini-candles until the chain was swimming in molten candle wax and let it sit for around 10 minutes on a low heat, stirring occasionally so that the wax could get maximum dispersion on the chain and bushings. Using an old spoke, I removed the chain and hung on nail to cool down. The cold chain felt like it had factory lube on again. So how did it fair?
I managed just over 500km on a single wax treatment. It has been brilliant and smooth action on chain. No oiling or greasing of chain necessary despite riding in some rain and in very dusty off road conditions at times.
Last week I began to notice slight increase in chain friction and slight chain noise last week, so I whipped off the Wipperman, which was reasonably clean to touch without oil or grease being used for a while, and dropped it in a warm pan of oil again.
The chain will reach 4000 km this week, and my only regret is that I let the dirt and grime mix with oil and grease treatments during the winter. I've been amazed how well riding on candle wax compares- and how simple it is to remove and dip the chain to re-lube it. The trousers stay clean, and the reapplication of wax to a cleaner chain was a doddle. When I change chain a sproket the next time, I will try to ride only on wax as I definately feel that less grime and dirt gets stuck on the chain than with oil, so this will hopefully extend the chain life accordingly.
Not for everyone, but for now, I'm sticking to my cheapo Ikea candle wax lube on my Rohloff hub which IMHO is the best lube I've used in 45 years of cycling!
Interested if anyone else has tried similar and come to same (or different) conclusion