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01-29-2005, 04:03 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Amazonia, Mo. USA
Posts: 2,821
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Need lockout lube info- general
I am working over the new lockouts today and reading the factory service manual.
We all know this is 30+ year old information. What are you using for lube on the lockouts, chassis, all greasable points on these old trucks? There have to be much better choices these days. I would guess that some are advertised as the all around lube. But, there is probably a best for each use. What do you use for the diffs., transfer case, tranny and joints? 2wd or 4wd. Synthetic greases, lithium or what.
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72 3/4 4x4 350 4spd 72 3/4 4x4 350 auto 2004 Duramax Silverado 4x4 2006 Duramax Crew cab 4x4 2010 Harley Ultra Limited 2011 Harley Street Glide |
01-29-2005, 10:09 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Turner Valley, Alberta
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This is what I use:
If chassis parts are in "very good shape" I use synthetic chassis grease. If the boots are cracked then its a waste. Regular chassis grease is better. For u-joints regular chassis grease. For diffs. synthetic 75w90 - a friction modifier is not needed with this syn oil. For the hubs I use a white lithium grease. Wheel bearings I have used synthetic grease but havent seen long term results yet. Auto tranny regular Dexron Transfer case- depends on recomm fluid. If gear oil then syn 75w90, if atf then I am thinking of trying GM's new AUTOTRACII, have to do a little more research before I change out to that. Motors-always synthetic, with no other "snake oil" additives.
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1970 GMC K15 - Canadian built 2nd Owner truck 68k miles 2014 Denali 1500 6.2L |
01-29-2005, 10:15 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Amazonia, Mo. USA
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Follow up question.
By hubs I assume you are talking about the lockout hubs. Why synthetic for the wheel bearings and white lithium for the hubs, not syn. for both?
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72 3/4 4x4 350 4spd 72 3/4 4x4 350 auto 2004 Duramax Silverado 4x4 2006 Duramax Crew cab 4x4 2010 Harley Ultra Limited 2011 Harley Street Glide |
01-30-2005, 07:01 AM | #4 |
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: "Under Montana skies."
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The disc brake hub wheel bearings require disc brake high-temp rated grease, whether conventional or synthetic, but the lockout hubs don't. In fact, disc brake high-temp grease goes goey easier than non high-temp wheel bearing or chassis grease. The lockouts need a grease that will stay in place and not ooze into the wheel hub, so I use a grease with good thickeners. You want a grease with good thickeners for the u-joints and steering joints (TRES, etc.) since it also must stay in place to work well. I splurge on Amsoil for most everything. IIRC, Amsoil offers three different greases that meet my trucks various needs.
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'71 GMC K20 Suburban, '71 GMC K10 Suburban, '72 Chevy C10 CST Suburban, '72 Chevy K20 clunker pickup. |
01-30-2005, 11:05 AM | #5 |
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Amazonia, Mo. USA
Posts: 2,821
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Thanks.
Knowing the lockouts would only get occasional use, winter cold mostly, I wanted something that will hold up to extreme cold and remain pliable. But also survive the summer heats. I don't mud so deep water or mud is not an issue.
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72 3/4 4x4 350 4spd 72 3/4 4x4 350 auto 2004 Duramax Silverado 4x4 2006 Duramax Crew cab 4x4 2010 Harley Ultra Limited 2011 Harley Street Glide |
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