WackyDan
New member
Update: Been digging around... it looks like just about any common grease today, even the marine grease is lithium/lithium complex... so most should be compatible. Marine greases specifically for salt water look not to be... Looks like you should avoid mixing Moly fortified grease with lithium greases and most moly comes in tubs, not tubes for grease guns and zerks.
Was told by my dealer that they come from the factory with a marine grease and that is what they use when the dealer greases those fittings.
So... What say the Spyder masses? I'm going to check the manual but I thought it called for a standard lithium chassis grease.
I found some compatibility tables here and here:
http://www.finalube.com/reference_material/grease_compatibility_chart.htm
http://www.mobilindustrial.com/IND/English/Files/tt-grease-compatibility.pdf
Of course, this link says you can't rely on compatibility charts...
http://www.machinerylubrication.com/Read/1865/grease-compatibility
I've heard time after time not to mix greases - specifically marine types greases for boat trailer axles/hubs, and standard Chassis type lube that you would use on a ball joint. True stories or myths... of the two greases reacting and turning caustic, or liquifying, etc...
The info out there on the web is confusing as determining the exact make up of your grease is hard enough, much less knowing what grease the shop used on your machine.
Was told by my dealer that they come from the factory with a marine grease and that is what they use when the dealer greases those fittings.
So... What say the Spyder masses? I'm going to check the manual but I thought it called for a standard lithium chassis grease.
I found some compatibility tables here and here:
http://www.finalube.com/reference_material/grease_compatibility_chart.htm
http://www.mobilindustrial.com/IND/English/Files/tt-grease-compatibility.pdf
Of course, this link says you can't rely on compatibility charts...
http://www.machinerylubrication.com/Read/1865/grease-compatibility
I've heard time after time not to mix greases - specifically marine types greases for boat trailer axles/hubs, and standard Chassis type lube that you would use on a ball joint. True stories or myths... of the two greases reacting and turning caustic, or liquifying, etc...
The info out there on the web is confusing as determining the exact make up of your grease is hard enough, much less knowing what grease the shop used on your machine.
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