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If you're going to use something like that you may as well just use coconut oil. It will work fine, you just have to be scrupulous about cleaning your drive train, because it will get gummy.
Personally I use T-9. Petrochemicals are useful.
I suggested coconut oil because I've actually had tolerable results using it and because you can get good, organic coconut oil for $20 a liter, as opposed to $86 a liter for the "Green Oil." I'm sure a bicycle specific lubricant gets better results, but I'm skeptical that the results are more than four times as good. Plus you can't cook or style your hair with bike lubricant.
I suggested coconut oil because I've actually had tolerable results using it and because you can get good, organic coconut oil for $20 a liter, as opposed to $86 a liter for the "Green Oil." I'm sure a bicycle specific lubricant gets better results, but I'm skeptical that the results are more than four times as good. Plus you can't cook or style your hair with bike lubricant.
Until we reach an age when food riots are a distant memory and everyone around the world is finally enjoying a post-scarcity existence I'll happily continue using the nastiest, most Gaia-unfriendly chemicals to service my various modes of transportation. Sorry, but I just find the use of food products in this manner to be especially foul regardless of whether it fills a car fuel tank or lubricates a bicycle chain.
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