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Winter Bike Care
Why Winter Is When Most Bike Damage Actually Happens
Winter damage is invisible โ until itโs expensive. Hereโs why spring repair bills are often higher, and how to stop it.
If you asked most cyclists when bikes take the most punishment, theyโd say summer โ more miles, more riding, more wear. In reality, winter is when the most damaging processes start, quietly and out of sight. By the time spring arrives, the damage is already done โ and thatโs why repair bills can feel so painful.
Winter damage starts long before you hear a noise
The most expensive bike problems donโt start with dramatic failures. They start with moisture creeping into components, salt sitting where it shouldnโt, and grit slowly wearing parts from the inside.
Bearings, cables, bottom brackets and headsets rarely fail suddenly. They corrode gradually โ long before you feel roughness or hear creaking. By the time something sounds wrong, parts are often already past the point of saving.
Salt + moisture + inactivity: the worst combo
Winter introduces three things bikes hate most โ at the same time.
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Road salt
Salt accelerates corrosion. Even small amounts left on a bike can keep working away at metal surfaces long after the ride is over. -
Moisture
Winter bikes rarely dry properly on their own. Moisture sits in bearings, cable housings and frame junctions โ perfect conditions for corrosion. -
Riding less
A bike stored dirty and damp can deteriorate faster than one ridden regularly and cleaned properly. Moisture doesnโt โwork itself outโ โ it stays put.
Why you donโt notice winter damage straight away
Winter damage is subtle. Bearings feel slightly heavier. Shifting is almost as good as it used to be. Small noises come and go. Nothing feels urgent โ so it gets ignored.
Then spring arrives. You ride more, load increases, and suddenly bearings feel rough, gears wonโt index cleanly, and parts that couldโve been serviced now need replacing. Thatโs not bad luck โ thatโs winter damage revealing itself.
Why spring repair bills are often higher
Spring isnโt when damage happens โ itโs when damage becomes obvious. By then, corrosion has progressed, cheap preventative fixes are no longer possible, and labour can increase because parts are seized or heavily worn.
What actually helps in winter
You donโt need to baby your bike โ a few habits make a big difference:
- Donโt store bikes wet.
- Rinse salt off after winter rides.
- Light lubrication is better than neglect.
- Address small noises early.
A winter check now is the cheapest time to protect your bike
Catch corrosion and wear early, before it becomes a spring repair bill.
Book your winter check at Saint Piran Service CourseTip: If youโve ridden through salty roads (or stored the bike damp), donโt wait for spring to find out.
