mrpoppy58
Silver Member
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 104
- Tractor
- Mahindra 2810
I bought a Five Gallon Bucket of that Grease from TSC and I like it. It really works on my loader pins.
mrpoppy
mrpoppy
Wayne County Hose said:I think that if you ask 10 very good mechanics this question, you will get at least 9 different answers. Personally, I like the Kendall Super-Blu.
For that matter, if you ask 10 different bad mechanics, you get 10 different opinions
we buy Kendall Super Blue at work, but we aren't supposed to use it in wheel bearings, just in chassis lubing.
something was said about washout. sooper blue does seem tthinner that other #2 greases, actually flows.
anyway!
http://129.35.64.91/bpglis/lubtds.nsf/technicaldata/667B21EB6DDA562480256C4E005B80FD?OpenDocumentZ-Michigan said:Moly or no moly is your choice. Moly is generally highly recommended for areas that get large impacts, like loader pivot pins. I'm not aware of high speed problems for moly that Snowridge alluded to, and in fact I have a can of wheel bearing grease (for on-highway wheel bearings) that is heavily moly fortified. If there are high speed issues I'm sure it's at a much higher speed than any greased part on a tractor operates at.
Now thats a funny story!zzvyb6 said:I'd focus on he best tasting stuff. Last Spring while doing double duty eating some Dunkin's and greasing the machinery, I noticed a dab of red stuff on my shirt. Assuming it was drippage from the jelly filled, I swiped it onto my tongue. Well it was the TSC red.
KICK said:For that matter, if you ask 10 different bad mechanics, you get 10 different opinions