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I fold and unfold my Dahon Speed D7 at least four times a day, and each time its seatpost is being pulled up or pushed down the frame tube.

Problem is that the seatpost becomes dirty really quickly even on a dry weather. I suspect the aluminium it's made of is softer than the frame alloy and every time I move it up or down the tube it's being filed down a bit, and so the dirt is actually very fine chips of the seatpost itself. However, it hasn't been changing for a couple of years (shouldn't it already be polished enough by this moment?)

It's hard to tell for sure from the dirt look itself though. Is it possible for the road dust to get that quickly through the opening of the frame below? Would oiling the seatpost help or it would only make it worse (dry dirt is much more preferable to deal with than when mixed with oil)?

Maybe it makes sense to replace the seatpost with a steel one (not sure if they exist as a specific diameter and length are required).

Must be a common problem for folding bike owners, how do you cope with that?

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    You can see the dust or whatever it is stops near the top of the seatpost so if definitely comes from the frame tube.
    – Yuriy
    Commented Jul 25, 2012 at 9:33
  • I simply don't drop the seatpost. Instead I use the saddle as a handle and wheel the bike around on its rear wheel. Otherwise, being tall, I'd have to carry my bike and its not light. I figure it folds to save horizontal space, and that vertical space is less of a premium.
    – Criggie
    Commented Jan 15, 2017 at 19:24
  • Yes, that what I have switched to with my new bike (also a Dahon).
    – Yuriy
    Commented Jan 16, 2017 at 9:56

3 Answers 3

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If you have an old inner tube available cut a section slightly longer than your seatpost. Slip it over the seat post and zip tie it in place. It will act as a somewhat water/dirt resistant boot, similar to what mountain bikes have on the front shocks. You may have to look for a fairly wide tube to fit over the post. Check with your local shop to see if they have any unrepairable ones left laying around.

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    A. Not a good solution if he wants to collapse the the seat 4 times a day... B. I have that dirt even when the seat isn't collapsed. Perhaps the seat post sheds after the initial coating is eroded. Bad news for my pants, and in an awkward place.
    – user13494
    Commented Aug 22, 2014 at 5:09
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Another option is to remove the seat post from the saddle and the bike, then polish it.

You could polish it by hand, but a far easier solution is to spin it in a lathe and apply a light touch with sandpaper and WD40 as a lubricant.

Use a light touch, this will take some material off the outside diameter of the seat post. A solution to that is to apply a wide-spaced knurl, also using the lathe.

To provide a nice finish, you could apply buffing compound and bring it to a shine, and then top-coat with multiple layers of clearcoat. This will wear off over time but will keep the seatpost looking shiny.

If you have access to the gear, anodising the aluminium is also a valid solution. This lets you choose a colour too, and the duration spent in electrolysis will govern the thickness.


Separately, you want to clean the bore in your frame too. Use a suitably-sized bottle-brush with a long handle of twisted wire. Fit the handle to the chuck of an electric drill, and "hone" the inside of the frame tube. You need to use degreaser and flowing water, so this is an outdoor task. If you feel or see any daggs or obstructions that could scratch your seatpost, try and file or sand them smooth. Bright torchlight helps here.

Hopefully your seat tube does not exit into the BB housing - most folders avoid this but I can't see in your photo. If it does, all this wash-water will drop into the BB area contaminating the bearings there. Avoid by removing the cranks and bearings.


On reassembly, make sure everything is completely dry. Using grease will make a mess of the seatpost when extended, so I'd avoid grease.

If your seatpost does not exit the bottom of the frame when bike is folded, then I'd suggest making some kind of cap for the bottom of that tube to keep dirt and debris out.


If none of this seems feasible, then you might choose to buy a new seatpost.

TERN bikes offer a two-stage telescoping post like this: enter image description here

And there are doubtless seatposts with a hinge to allow folding rather than collapsing. I'd personally be leery of them but they're an option too.

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I might be a bit late on this one. It looks to me that you have a few burs on the inside of your frames seat tube. There is a tool called a flex hone that you can buy, chuck into a drill and stuff down there with cutting oil to smooth evrything out. I do this on all my new bikes to prevent the seat tube getting scratches. Clean it out after with a rag and iso. Then lube your seatpost. Maybe keep a rag tied to the bike someplace to clean the post off when you need to fold the bike. 4 times a day is a lot of folding, I'm impressed.

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  • Does this affect the inner diameter of the tube? How does this compare to the above suggestion of a similar treatment with a bottle brush?
    – DavidW
    Commented Mar 23, 2023 at 1:36
  • I've never used a bottle brush before so I'm not sure about comparing them fairly. Larger flex hones are used to clean corrosion out of engines. It should not change the inner diameter of the seat tube in any meaningful way. That being said don't go overbord on it. 15 to 30 seconds of rotation while you move it up and down inside the seat tube is plenty. 60 seconds tops. Commented Mar 23, 2023 at 23:52

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