after I offloaded my "bard/shed" find 1981 GS450, I had a few friends come by and give advice and help me out getting it road worthy. The problem of the chain came up. MM looked at it and said "aw, its just surface rust, the sprockets are fine.... take it off an give it to me". So I took it off and handed it to him. Fast forward 4 days later, chain comes back rust free, moving great and lubed... I had to ask. He said he let it soak in a solution of phosphoric acid for about an hour, used a brass brush to gently scrub off the heavy stuff, put it back in the solution over night. Gave it another scrub in the morning, let it sit til lunch in the solution and then pulled it out and rinsed it with some used motor oil. After letting it run off for a couple hours...I'm guessing dinner time. He rinsed it in the used oil again, then let it sit over night. The next day he lubed it up with white lithium grease and warmed it up to about 120 degrees for a few minutes, took it out let it cool and then repeated the lithium grease. Next day he sprayed a little lithium grease on the chain and we put it on the bike... looks almost new, can't see the rust. Have about 600 miles on the chain, get no chain noise, nothing kinks... he keeps telling me "it's good, don't worry about it"
He said this is what they did in "the old days" before the internet when they would get a "cosmetically deficient" trade-in to make it look better with the least amount of effort but pose no liability to the shop.
Anyone else ever use this type of process....or should I get a new chain on order lol
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