Hi Frank,
Thanks for sharing your experience. I've read Leonard Zinn's suggestion, but have never read an account by someone who had applied it in the desert, so your experience is new to me. I'm glad it worked out well for you, and look forward to hearing how it works on your Rohloff-equipped Thorn when you have the opportunity to take a similar tour on it. The concept is a bit like a total-loss oiling system (
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Describe_the_operation_and_maintenance_of_total_loss_lubrication ) or an automatic chain oiler on a chainsaw.
I found a video by Leonard Zinn showing his oiling/cleaning method here:
http://www.5min.com/Video/How-to-Clean-and-Lube-Your-Mountain-Bikes-Chain-516993545 , and found it interesting. One thing that concerns me about the Zinn video is wiping the outside of the chain doesn't catch the grit and dirt between the links and on the rollers where it contacts the gear teeth. At home, I have always been a "bug" about cleaning my chains so they are free of grit and then completely dried (compressed air) and freshly oiled afterward. While on-tour in the desert, I take care to brush grit off the outside of the chain, chainrings, and cogs with a cut-down toothbrush before re-oiling, taking extra care to clean between the links using a recycled mascara brush (thanks to a friend who gives me her old ones). It doesn't take much time to clear the dirt first, and leaves less behind to grind away on the gear teeth. I just store the brushes in a little zip-top baggie in my underseat bag where they'll be handy enough to actually use. My fenders and long front mudflap do a good job of preventing dirt from being thrown directly on the chain.
Did you apply the fresh Pro-Link to the inside run of chain (the gear side)? You mentioned the outside of the chain became pretty crusty with dust and dirt clinging to the oil...how did the chainrings and cog teeth appear? Were they washed pretty clean by the reapplications of oil, or did they develop a crust as well?
I read your initial account of your tour (
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?topic=3343.msg16856#msg16856 ) and how you mentioned...
the chain jammed when I backpedaled because the jockey wheels were all covered with grit.
Do you think think this might have been a side effect of the extra oil catching the dust and dirt?
Pro-Link is a lube many people seem happy with; reviews are generally enthusiastic. I haven't tried it myself, out of concern for its effect on polycarbonate plastics. I run Planet Bike polycarbonate fenders on some of my other bikes, and was a bit worried any slung Pro-Link might damage them, as some reports indicate. I pulled up the MSDS for Pro-Gold's Pro-Link chain lube here:
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=pro-gold+prolink+msds&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCEQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.hawleyusa.com%2Fthcstore%2FIncludes%2Fpdf%2FMSDS%2520Sheets%2Fprogold%2FLUBE3610.pdf&ei=QEU7T6HMIsm42wXi5ZDBCg&usg=AFQjCNGQFRttuVR3ZElTLs4veDJ0yW-i9g&cad=rja , and find it is composed primarily of naphthenic derivatives and Naphthalene, the main ingredient in old-fashioned mothballs (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naphthalene ) and aliphatic hydrocarbons. No wonder it dissolves polycarbonate. This can absorb quickly through skin and adversely affect health, so it might be a good idea to tuck in a pair of Nitrile gloves to protect your hands, as Leonard does in the video. You were wise to scrub your hands in the sand right away.
Thanks for the report! We all go about things in our own way, so it is always good to hear of other means and methods so we can weigh them in light of our own experiences.
Best,
Dan.