Anyone ever use Royal Purple as a lube?
I'm sure it would work okay, but it costs almost four times more than other synthetic oils out there.
Anyone ever use Royal Purple as a lube?
I'm sure it would work okay, but it costs almost four times more than other synthetic oils out there.
What is the thinking behind that? My feeling is that suspension of the carbon etc would make it easier to clean and reduce it baking into place.
The need for it is probably less than in an engine but I don't see why it would be a bad thing.
I'm sure most gun oils are pretty normal oils with different additives such as dents and maybe rust inhibitors.
I'd lose it before running out LOLI bought a liter of synthetic motor oil 15 years ago, still have lots. Use spray can gun oil for hard to reach places.
The guys in the metalworking forums (some anyways) opined that the detergent additives could potentially absorb and hold moisture, as they are supposed to do inside your engine, so the story goes.
Do I believe? Not like religion, or anything like that.
Motor oil, mineral oil, baby oil (is that stuff rendered, or do they squeeze it?), whatever ya got that's oil is better than no oil, unless it gums things up. Turbine oil is usually just really clean mineral oil with different additives, and a far higher price tag due to "aircraft" being involved. But guys used a lot of it to spray under their cars...
My go-to is my many times refilled 3-in-1 can, which is straight 20wt.
I remember a thread like that, I think that Fluid Film was one of the products that came out on top.
are you in a pinch? like Stalingrad and surrounded by Germans with all your supplies cut off for the winter ...
or are you just looking to save a few $$
If i was stuck and needed something right now, i few drops of 5W30 would keep invaders at bay but id never walk past real gun oil just to save $3.
Way back in time on this site, at a couple of different times, posters did experiments showing what would happen to steel left immersed in oil, over a two week period.
The only oils that inhibited rust completely were non detergent types.
Great stuff.
Never seen a rusty sheep!
It is flat out the best case lube I have ever used.
The thinner the better you say..or noneHa ha had to laugh at that...A Russian winter in a life& death situation is the last place I would use motor oil. Realistically, in that instance i would want dry dry dry.
Yeah, the theory made enough sense to me that I don't go out and buy detergent oils for stuff like that.
But I don't lose any sleep if i need a drop of oil and what I have handy is the dregs from a empty oil jug.
On the other side, I don't really feel the need to run out and load up on custom formulations for every different usage, because, you know, gawd'll getcha, if you were to use sewing machine oil on yer bicycle!
I like Fluid Film, used a LOT of it when I was moving my machine tools. It's great, until you have to wash the goo off! LOL! Better than scrubbing rust!