Dargo
Super Member
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,981
- Location
- S. IN
- Tractor
- Jinma, Foton, TYM, Belarus, Yanmar, Branson, Montana, Mahindra and maybe some green and orange too.
Since I can buy from a local distributor, I like my net cost of about $1.25 a tube for nearly any of the top name greases. I get Cat, JD, NH, Lucas, Pennzoil, Kendall etc. for that price. I figure that if the local construction companies, the actual tractor manufacturers and the coal mines use the stuff it can't be that bad. Some of these contractors and the mines get tens of thousands of hours on much of their equipment. Besides, a 40 year master mechanic who is over a large area of Peabody's mine maintenance tells me that if is best to pump out some of the old contaminated grease on most external fittings when greasing. If the old grease has dirt and grit in it, it makes sense to me. I'd just as soon push it out with fresh new grease that is made for, and named as, the manufacturer of my machine.
For my "bulk" use that is pumped by my pneumatic greaser, I use 120 pound quarter barrels that cost me about $100 if I pick them up. If something will last 10,000 hours with what I'm using at that price I'm paying, I'm willing to just risk it.
There again, I'm too cheap to pay $9 or $10 a quart for super motor oil either when I haven't been convinced what I use is insufficient in the last 30 years or so. I've noticed that the grease I use has listed molybdenum disulfide on the label for decades. Also, why does "Bob is the Oil Guy" says Schaeffer grease is the best.
Obviously I'm not the right guy for the stuff. "Soundguy" may more of a candidate than me. 
For my "bulk" use that is pumped by my pneumatic greaser, I use 120 pound quarter barrels that cost me about $100 if I pick them up. If something will last 10,000 hours with what I'm using at that price I'm paying, I'm willing to just risk it.