A lot of you need to hit the books on some of these "wonder lubes" everybody is up in arms about. Frog lube, fire clean, break free CLP, etc.
Frog lube goes to #### so hard with hard use in cold environments, and the way you have to apply it... Heat the parts up and brush it on. A CLP needs to be able to be sprayed into the bolt on a firearm in the field after dumping a thousand rounds and then be able to keep the gun going. A lube that requires heating parts up with a hair dryer is definitively no good for field use.
There is a thread on ARFCOM where a dude did a test on Fireclean and it didn't perform so well in cold whether either.
Some 1911 guy on youtube did a multiple hour test on breakfree CLP using laboratory equipment like mass spectrometers and other stuff. Turns out it's piss.
There is about half a dozen industrial lubricant companies that supply CLP to the U.S. & Canadian military. G96 is one of them and is the only one that sells to the public.
The only lube that is actually approved for military use and is available to the public is G96 CLP. There isn't another manufacture right now that can make that claim.
The military actually use it and it has passed documented tests, among are tests showing the ability to perform in frigid temperatures, sandy environments, etc.
"Hey I saw 8 dudes at the range using frog lube so it must be the best" is the same hearsay bull#### mentality that makes people think old cars are safer then new ones.
Frog lube goes to #### so hard with hard use in cold environments, and the way you have to apply it... Heat the parts up and brush it on. A CLP needs to be able to be sprayed into the bolt on a firearm in the field after dumping a thousand rounds and then be able to keep the gun going. A lube that requires heating parts up with a hair dryer is definitively no good for field use.
There is a thread on ARFCOM where a dude did a test on Fireclean and it didn't perform so well in cold whether either.
Some 1911 guy on youtube did a multiple hour test on breakfree CLP using laboratory equipment like mass spectrometers and other stuff. Turns out it's piss.
There is about half a dozen industrial lubricant companies that supply CLP to the U.S. & Canadian military. G96 is one of them and is the only one that sells to the public.
The only lube that is actually approved for military use and is available to the public is G96 CLP. There isn't another manufacture right now that can make that claim.
The military actually use it and it has passed documented tests, among are tests showing the ability to perform in frigid temperatures, sandy environments, etc.
"Hey I saw 8 dudes at the range using frog lube so it must be the best" is the same hearsay bull#### mentality that makes people think old cars are safer then new ones.


















































