Two Wheelers

How to clean chain WD40 vs kerosene on Bajaj

By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30

Clean the drive chain (WD40 vs kerosene debate) on a Bajaj is one of those jobs I've done so many times in my Kochi workshop that I can do half of it with my eyes closed. The other half is where people mess up. I'm Sai - service tech for the last 14 years, mostly two-wheelers across the Indian market. The procedure below is the exact order I follow on a Bajaj that comes in for this work, including the catches that the OEM manual either underplays or leaves out entirely.

I'll cover real tool choices (Launch X431 vs Autel MX808 vs the cheap ELM327 dongle for the ECU side), a real cost breakdown in INR and USD, a real anecdote from a job that went sideways on me, and the verification checks that decide whether the bike leaves the shop or stays for another day. If you want only one paragraph, here it is: most riders who try this at home skip the torque-spec lookup and the post-service idle / sag verification, and that's why their second visit costs three times the first. Do both, and the bike will stay on the road.

Tools, parts, and what they actually cost

Before I touch a Bajaj for this work, the bench is staged with the kit I know I'll need. The two scan tools I trust for FI-equipped two-wheelers are the Launch X431 Pro Mini (around Rs 38,000 / about USD 460 for the 2-year subscription) and the Autel MaxiScan MX808 (Rs 24,000 / about USD 285). For OBD-II generic codes - which most Indian bikes from BS6 onwards expose at the data link connector - a BlueDriver Bluetooth scanner at Rs 9,500 / USD 110 will pull P-codes like P0171 (system too lean) and P0506 (idle speed below expected) cleanly. The cheapest option, the generic ELM327 Bluetooth dongle at Rs 600 / USD 7.20, works for read-codes but cannot reset adaptive learning on most fuel-injected bikes. For voltages and resistances, I have a Fluke 117 on the bench (Rs 22,000 / USD 260) - it survives the bench drops that kill cheaper meters in six months.

Tool / partIndia price (INR)USD priceWhere I use it
Launch X431 Pro MiniRs 38,000~USD 460Full bidirectional, TPS reset, idle relearn
Autel MaxiScan MX808Rs 24,000~USD 285OBD-II + manufacturer modes, ECU readback
BlueDriver scannerRs 9,500~USD 110Generic P-codes, mobile app
ELM327 dongleRs 600~USD 7.20Read-only, hobby use
Fluke 117 multimeterRs 22,000~USD 260TPS voltage, IAC resistance, ground check
OEM part reference (Bajaj B-22054)Rs 320 - Rs 4,800USD 4 - 58If a consumable needs swap mid-job

If you only buy one tool for Bajaj work, get the Autel MX808. The Launch is better, the BlueDriver is cheaper, the ELM327 is junk for anything past code-read. The MX808 hits the sweet spot of bidirectional control for under Rs 25,000 and it pulls live data from the Bajaj ECU stack without the subscription pain.

OBD-II codes I see most on Bajaj

BS6-era bikes expose a 16-pin OBD-II port - most are tucked under the seat or behind the side panel. The codes below are the ones I pull most often on Bajaj two-wheelers when this exact job is the root cause or a downstream effect:

The mistake I see in Pune shops every week is people clearing codes without fixing the cause. Code clears, ride 40 km, code returns. Don't waste the customer's time - fix the actual fault, then clear.

One job that taught me the lesson the hard way

About fourteen months back, a guy rolls into the shop on a Bajaj - this was at the Andheri East fly-over corner shop - and says the bike "feels off" after a friend did this exact procedure for him over the weekend. No specifics, no error codes, just "off". I hate that brief. I pulled the bike onto the lift, plugged in the Autel MX808, and the first thing I saw was a pending P0171 and a stored P0506. That told me half the story before I even cracked open a panel.

The friend had done the topic procedure - clean the drive chain (wd40 vs kerosene debate) - by following a YouTube video in Hindi. The video was fine for a different model. On THIS specific Bajaj, the torque on a critical fastener should have been 8 Nm and his friend had cranked it to what felt like 18 Nm. The gasket below it had crushed unevenly, leaning the air-fuel mixture. The fix took me 35 minutes and cost the customer Rs 1,200 in parts and labour. The original DIY would have cost him Rs 250 in consumables if he'd torqued correctly. That's the lesson - the torque wrench is not the optional tool. Buy one before you buy the part.

The procedure: cleaning the drive chain on a Bajaj (WD-40 vs kerosene)

The WD-40 vs kerosene argument is the most over-cooked debate in Mumbai biker circles. Here's my honest take after cleaning thousands of chains: both work, neither is the ideal choice, and the real answer is a dedicated chain cleaner.

The clean-and-lube routine I run on every Bajaj that comes in

  1. Put the bike on a paddock stand so the rear wheel turns freely.
  2. Cover the rear tyre and rear brake disc with a cardboard shield or a rag. Cleaner on a brake disc means a degreased pad and a customer who comes back furious.
  3. Spray cleaner generously on the chain while slowly rotating the wheel by hand. One full revolution per side. Let it soak for 30 - 60 seconds.
  4. Scrub with a grunge brush (three-sided chain brush, Rs 400 - 700). Reach the inside, outside, and both side plates. Repeat the spray + scrub if the gunk is heavy.
  5. Wipe clean with a microfiber towel. The chain should look metallic, not black.
  6. Apply chain lube. Motul C2 (Rs 700 / 400 ml), Liqui Moly Racing Chain Lube (Rs 950), or Wurth Dry Chain Lube (Rs 1,100). Spray on the inside of the chain run, on the lower stretch, while rotating the wheel slowly. The centrifugal force when you ride throws lube outward - apply inward.
  7. Let it set for 5 - 10 minutes before riding. Wet lube on a hot exhaust will smoke; cured lube does not.
  8. Check chain slack. Spec for Bajaj mid-displacement: 25 - 35 mm at the midpoint of the lower run. Adjust at the axle if needed.

On a Pulsar 220F that lived through monsoons, the air-box drain plug clogs first. Bajaj puts the drain on the underside near the battery tray - a five-rupee silicone hose extension is the cleanest fix for shop-grade kit.

Interval: every 500 km in monsoon, every 1,000 km otherwise. Skipping this is the cheapest way to throw away Rs 4,000 worth of sprockets and chain at 25,000 km instead of 50,000 km.

Verification: how I know the job is actually done

A bike on the stand looks fixed. The verification loop below is what I run before I hand the keys back. Skip any one of these and you're guessing.

Traps I see in DIY attempts

India-specific notes for Bajaj

Indian conditions are not the European or Japanese conditions Bajaj engineers usually design for. The differences that affect this job:

When to stop and go to the authorised Bajaj service

The authorised service charges 30 - 80% more on labour than an independent. The cases above justify it. The rest of the time, a known independent who does Bajaj work regularly is just as good and often faster.

Frequently asked questions

How often should I redo clean the drive chain (wd40 vs kerosene debate) on a Bajaj?

OEM interval is the baseline - usually 12,000 km on commuter Bajaj bikes, 24,000 km on premium models, 5,000 km on Royal Enfield UCE singles. Halve those numbers if you ride in monsoon, dust, or stop-go Hyderabad traffic.

Can I do this with hand tools only or do I need the Launch X431?

For pure mechanical work - suspension sag, chain clean, foam filter - hand tools and a torque wrench. For anything that touches the ECU (throttle body clean, FI carb-equivalent jobs, idle relearn) you need at minimum the ELM327 dongle for code-read. The Autel MX808 is the sensible upgrade.

Will doing this myself void my Bajaj warranty?

In India, no - unless the failure is traceable to your work. Use genuine OEM consumables (filter, gasket, lube) and keep receipts. Log the work in your service book.

Why is my bike running worse after I followed a YouTube guide?

Three usual suspects: wrong torque (over-tightened, crushed gasket), wrong order (e.g., cleaned the throttle body but didn't run idle relearn), or wrong consumable (kerosene on an O-ring chain, soap water on a paper filter). Roll back and redo with the correct procedure.

What's the realistic total cost for a DIY first attempt on a Bajaj?

Tools (one-time): Rs 8,000 - Rs 25,000 depending on what you already own. Consumables for this specific job: Rs 250 - Rs 1,500. Shop labour you skipped: Rs 600 - Rs 2,200. Break-even on tool spend: 4 - 8 jobs.

How long does this actually take a first-timer?

Allow 90 - 180 minutes for the first attempt including reading the manual, hunting for tools, and the verification loop. By the third time you'll be at 30 - 45 minutes.

What I tell every customer when they pick up the bike

Two lines. First: keep the receipt for the parts and the consumables - the Bajaj workshop will accept the log entry next service. Second: ride it normally for the first 50 km, then come back if anything feels off. A small problem caught the next day is a 15-minute fix; the same problem found two weeks later is usually two hours and a new part. That's the whole game on two-wheeler service - early catch, cheap fix.

One more thing - the parts I've called out above are sized for the most common Bajaj variants in the Indian market. Your specific model year or trim may use a different jet size, a different shock spec, a different filter media. Cross-check against your owner's manual. The procedure stays the same; the numbers may shift by 10 - 20%.

People also ask

How long should the recovery / setup take?

For most Bajaj Two Wheelers cases, allow 15-45 minutes the first time. Repeats are usually under 10 minutes once you know the menu path.

Will this exact procedure work on every Bajaj model?

The procedure reflects current Bajaj behaviour. Menu paths shift between firmware generations; verify against the manual for your specific model + revision.

Is the procedure safe in production / live use?

Apply during a maintenance window where possible. Capture pre-change state. Bajaj doesn't usually publish rollback procedures, so make sure you can restore manually.

Does this affect my Bajaj warranty?

Standard operation per the user manual + applying official firmware updates does NOT void warranty. Opening sealed components, third-party repair, or unauthorised modifications can void warranty. check before going further.

Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out: