Frankenkubota
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2020
- Messages
- 2,386
- Location
- Carthage NC...Deep in the woods
- Tractor
- Kubota MX 5800, SkidPro 4 in 1, Ratchet rake, SkidPro pallet forks
That doesn't make sense to me. The pull tab end is the end that goes towards the pump. That's the side you don't want the air to go to. I guess if your grease gun could accept the tubes the other way around it would make sense.
Just thought I壇 post what SkidPro recommends
Itç—´ gotta mean every time you use it?
View attachment 666524
I don't know if it's "melting" but I've been meaning for a long time to build a wall bracket for my grease gun that catches the "weepage" that ends up on my garage floor underneath it over time (both from the tip and the plunger).My grease doesn't melt and settle in the tube anyway. If it melted and moved that easily it wouldn't stay in place on hot machinery very long.
I don't know if it's "melting" but I've been meaning for a long time to build a wall bracket for my grease gun that catches the "weepage" that ends up on my garage floor underneath it over time (both from the tip and the plunger).
The idea of "choosing just one grease" comes across as a lazy, irresponsible endeavor, ESPECIALLY, if others depend on using the equipment maintained so poorly.
Take a look at this:
Lever Action Grease Gun
Grease guns are cheap.
Equipment IS NOT!
I just bought a flail mower for $5500.00.
Should I use the grease specified by the manufacturer, or play it lazy and use the one and only grease I have limited myself to?
We use water proof grease, food grade grease, HP grease, general purpose grease and a couple more.
There are good reasons for all of the greases available and good reasons the manufacturers specified the ones that they did.
For my limited use at home (a commercial front-mount mower and a SCUT with a FEL) I don't think it's a horrible compromise. The only concern really is the snowmobiles (wanting a specific low-temp, water resistant grease) but they don't see a lot of miles these days.The idea of "choosing just one grease" comes across as a lazy, irresponsible endeavor, ESPECIALLY, if others depend on using the equipment maintained so poorly.
Take a look at this:
Lever Action Grease Gun
Grease guns are cheap.
Equipment IS NOT!
I just bought a flail mower for $5500.00.
Should I use the grease specified by the manufacturer, or play it lazy and use the one and only grease I have limited myself to?
We use water proof grease, food grade grease, HP grease, general purpose grease and a couple more.
There are good reasons for all of the greases available and good reasons the manufacturers specified the ones that they did.
Just like multiweight oils, grease has evolved. You can safely buy a good quality multi purpose grease that will serve the purpose just fine.
I don't know if it's "melting" but I've been meaning for a long time to build a wall bracket for my grease gun that catches the "weepage" that ends up on my garage floor underneath it over time (both from the tip and the plunger).