Would You 'Grease' Yer Iron?

If it slides grease it. If it turns oil it. all you need to know to lubricate your guns.

If your in sub zero, stick to synthetic oil, in very small amounts.
 
Grease for sliding contact, oil for rotating contact. I use grease on all my semi-auto pistols where the slide rides on the frame. The key is to use it sparingly, you only need very small dabs to provide enough lube.


Mark

This for me works great
One drop one each side of the sliderail
And G96 on the rest of the gun even on the wood stocks
 
Grease for sliding contact, oil for rotating contact. I use grease on all my semi-auto pistols where the slide rides on the frame. The key is to use it sparingly, you only need very small dabs to provide enough lube.


Mark

I do the same as Mark. I use a high temp, all weather multi purpose white lithium grease (sparingly, as Mark said)...that's a mouthful, and it is essentially the same as the Sig TW25B at about 10% of the price. One big tube will last until I wear out all ten of my Sigs I figure. Works great, even when running hot tactical courses it still clings to slides, much better than oil. I can see no evidence of any wear on any of my slides, so I guess it works for me. I like to use Lucas gun oil on the internal bits, sparingly.
 
...and this is good? Bad?

It's bad optics when you can buy coconut oil at the grocery store for cheap and Froglube adds mint scent and charges $20 for a few mils. Is it good? Sure, the stuff works fine because oil is oil. The bad is you can get an ant infestation, lol. Like I said, it just is bad optics. Nothing beats a bottle of engine oil and a q-tip.
 
I like grease as an "assembly lube" on sliding surfaces when I field strip guns for cleaning. Oil is good for supplementary lubrication between cleanings.
 
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