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Weldtite Dirtwash Disc Rotor Wipes

8
£1.99

VERDICT:

8
10
Sensible emergency fix for commuters or tourers running hydraulic disc brakes
Weight: 
25g
Contact: 

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Disc brakes are springing up all over the place in the roadie market with the majority of them being put to work on all weather training and commuting bikes. Winter is here, so Weldtite's Dirtwash Disc Rotor Wipes are probably a sensible thing to keep in your rucksack.

Aimed primarily at the mountain biking community the Rotor Wipes are basically paper towels which are soaked in isopropyl alcohol. As a solvent it's intended here to clean pretty much anything off of your disc rotor to stop poor braking due to contamination.

For £1.99 you get six individual wipes in their own sachets all packed away in a plastic case. They'll remove dirt and grit but more importantly oil and hydraulic fluid. Now I know the majority of maintenance is carried out at home so these might not get a lot of use but they are intended as an emergency mid ride solution to brake fluid leaking onto the rotors or some over zealous chain lubrication.

I've tried them on pretty much every concoction I could find in the shed and the wipes removed it all while also leaving no residue on the rotors or your fingers. One wipe will clean both rotors though you've got to be quick as the alcohol evaporates pretty rapidly from the towel and it'll be dry before you know it.

Overall while they might sit in the bottom of your commuting bag for a while they are a worthwhile investment if you are running discs on the commute or touring especially if said brakes are hydraulic. At 33p a wipe it's not a huge investment either.

Verdict

A sensible emergency fix for commuters or tourers running hydraulic disc brakes

road.cc test report

Make and model: Weldtite Dirtwash Disc Rotor Wipes

Size tested: n/a

Tell us what the product is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?

Designed primarily for off road riding they do have applications for the road too. Touring with hydraulic discs could see leaked fluid on the rotor, a wipe off with one of these would them make laden descending safe again.

Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?

Paper towels soaked in isopropyl alcohol

Rate the product for quality of construction:
 
8/10

The towels are strong and won't snag or rip.

Rate the product for performance:
 
9/10

They'll get pretty much anything off the disc rotor leaving the discs completely clean and brand new looking.

Rate the product for weight, if applicable:
 
8/10

25g in your rucksack isn't going to be noticeable.

Rate the product for value:
 
7/10

£1.99 for the six may not be cheap compared to a home solution of an aerosol can of brake cleaner but its value for money as far as convenience is concerned.

Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose

Do exactly what they are supposed to.

Tell us what you particularly liked about the product

The cleaning power.

Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product

The fumes are a bit potent.

Did you enjoy using the product? Yes.

Would you consider buying the product? Yes.

Would you recommend the product to a friend? Yes.

Anything further to say about the product in conclusion?

A useful application for disc users who might need to do some road side maintenance.

Overall rating: 8/10

About the tester

Age: 36  Height: 180cm  Weight: 76kg

I usually ride: Kinesis T2  My best bike is: Kinesis Aithien

I've been riding for: 10-20 years  I ride: Every day  I would class myself as: Expert

I regularly do the following types of riding: time trialling, commuting, club rides, sportives, fixed/singlespeed,

 

Since writing his first bike review for road.cc back in early 2009 senior product reviewer Stu has tested more than a thousand pieces of kit, and hundreds of bikes.

With an HND in mechanical engineering and previous roles as a CNC programmer/machinist, draughtsman and development engineer (working in new product design) Stu understands what it takes to bring a product to market. A mix of that knowledge combined with his love of road and gravel cycling puts him in the ideal position to put the latest kit through its paces.

He first made the switch to road cycling in 1999, primarily for fitness, but it didn’t take long for his competitive side to take over which led to around ten years as a time triallist and some pretty decent results. These days though riding is more about escapism, keeping the weight off and just enjoying the fact that he gets to ride the latest technology as part of his day job.

Add new comment

15 comments

Avatar
rnick | 10 years ago
0 likes

So, where does this leave disc vs rim brake debate?? These discs sound real dangerous - you could lose a limb just servicing them, apparently. So maybe, I'll just take my chances out on the road with rim brakes.  3

Avatar
blacknose | 10 years ago
0 likes

In my 10+ years of riding with discs I have never once found myself thinking 'I wish I had some wetwipes to clean my rotors with'. How would you get chain lube on your rotors while out riding? And if hydraulic fluid has splashed onto your rotors on the trail you have bigger problems than a dirty rotor.

Avatar
patto583 | 10 years ago
0 likes

They'll clean chain gunk off your hands too, but they will dry out your skin in the process, so don't make a habit of it!!!

Avatar
Jez Ash | 10 years ago
0 likes

Mike & barbarus. They're not razor sharp, but you certainly can injure yourself on disc rotors, trust me. My personal recommendation would be not to inattentively allow the end of your finger to stray into the holes of a rotating disc rotor where it is about to enter the caliper. The inertia of the wheel means that the edges don't really need to be that sharp.

Avatar
Initialised | 10 years ago
0 likes

Or you could just buy a box of 100 pre-injection swabs for less than £2

Exactly the same product in a different package without the 1000% mark up.

Dirt wipes: £1.99 for 6 or 33p per wipe
Sterets: £3 for 100 or 3p per wipe

Avatar
Flying Scot replied to Initialised | 10 years ago
0 likes
Initialised wrote:

Or you could just buy a box of 100 pre-injection swabs for less than £2

Keep plenty on the team bus....just ask.

Avatar
Neil.brain replied to Initialised | 10 years ago
0 likes

You might need to work on the maths for that a bit longer!

Avatar
barbarus | 10 years ago
0 likes

Disc rotors are NOT like razors! You can hurt yourself in any number of ways on a bike wet-wiping your disc rotors will not be one of them.

Avatar
AWP replied to barbarus | 10 years ago
0 likes
barbarus wrote:

Disc rotors are NOT like razors! You can hurt yourself in any number of ways on a bike wet-wiping your disc rotors will not be one of them.

I can assure you that the edges of the Avid Clean Sweep rotors on my bike are like razors. I've had the plasters to prove it.

Avatar
mike the bike replied to AWP | 10 years ago
0 likes
AWP wrote:
barbarus wrote:

Disc rotors are NOT like razors! You can hurt yourself in any number of ways on a bike wet-wiping your disc rotors will not be one of them.

I can assure you that the edges of the Avid Clean Sweep rotors on my bike are like razors. I've had the plasters to prove it.

Let's be honest, some people could injure themselves on a damp flannel. I blame the 'elf an' safety generation.

Avatar
jacknorell | 10 years ago
0 likes

Mainly aimed at MTBs?

If you've got leaking brake fluid on an MTB, it's because you've ripped off the hose! No wipe is fixing that.

As far as contamination, just find some dirty water / mud, ride through it and hit the brakes and that's gone...

If worse than that, your pads are f-ed and you pop in new ones.

Avatar
AWP | 10 years ago
0 likes

They ought to come with a health warning. The edges of rotors are like razor blades and make short work of slicing fingers.
Be careful out there.

Avatar
mike the bike replied to AWP | 10 years ago
0 likes
AWP wrote:

They ought to come with a health warning. The edges of rotors are like razor blades and make short work of slicing fingers.
Be careful out there.

Really? I have, over the years, jammed my fingers in spokes, stabbed them with cable ends, abraded my thumbs on chainrings and barked my shins on pedals. But, having never come across a razor-edged brake disc, I tend to think they are an urban myth.

Avatar
surly_by_name replied to AWP | 10 years ago
0 likes
AWP wrote:

They ought to come with a health warning. The edges of rotors are like razor blades and make short work of slicing fingers.
Be careful out there.

And apparently they are often super heated as well, increasing the risk of death by dismemberment and cauterization. Soon there will be a campaign to encourage the UCI to refrain from allowing the use of disc brakes in the pro peleton .... what's that you say?

Avatar
Lecoops | 10 years ago
0 likes

Every now & again Aldi sells boxes of glasses cleaning wipes (50 for £1:99), They are alcohol wipes, might not be as good as the weldtite ones mentioned above but they have come in very handy for cleaning hands, rotors, glasses, pretty much anything. I always carry a couple in a jersey pocket for those sticky fingered occasions.

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