Your gut feeling Charlie is not based on technical fact,certain products have advanced and their usage.My gut feeling would be to avoid them. My only rationale would be that the teflon loaded lubes, like Triflow, have won my heart for all around do and protect about anything gun. I have used the silicone stuff on non-metallic things and that seemed OK since the ones I used were not petro vehicle things. I think
JMO for no solid reason so YMMV
https://www.acc-silicones.com/applications/lubrication.ashxMy gut feeling would be to avoid them...
JMO for no solid reason so YMMV
its not bedroom action i was talking aboutVaseline and 3 in 1 oil mixed and painted inside the action with a kids paintbrush. If it is good enough for most English gunmakers, then it will do for me !
AND, nor was I !....................................................I mean how good do you think my memory is ?its not bedroom action i was talking about
Standard WD-40 is not a lubricant. Legia spray is far better (use for cleaning and protection) and half as cheap. I take my stocks off now and again and give the trigger mechanism's a light spray and wipe of any excess. A proper grease or oil is what you should use on the hinge pins etc - your choice.Had a shooting lesson at doverige,when the instructor looked at the browning which I own,gave me a bollocking for using WD 40 as lubricant said it would damage the gun and not to used on any firearm
I asked Beretta / gmk what they reccomended for the action and the hinge pins, they replied "oil" rather than grease so its the little bottles of Beretta ones for me, there the bottles that you buy and get a free gun and case thrown in. ?Standard WD-40 is not a lubricant. Legia spray is far better (use for cleaning and protection) and half as cheap. I take my stocks off now and again and give the trigger mechanism's a light spray and wipe of any excess. A proper grease or oil is what you should use on the hinge pins etc - your choice.
I have been told by more than 1 gunsmith the thinner the oil the better so engine oil is a bit on the thick side i thinkGood quality engine oil for load bearing surfaces,not like your going to achieve several thousand movements a second on your action is it
I dunno, I can get very nervous when I am shooting. Having said that, a lot of other people also get very nervous when I am shooting ! :ahappy:Good quality engine oil for load bearing surfaces,not like your going to achieve several thousand movements a second on your action is it
Most modern engine oils are considerably thinner than in the past 5/30w being an example,but for any load bearing surface it is about the oil being able to maintain a film under pressure.I have been told by more than 1 gunsmith the thinner the oil the better so engine oil is a bit on the thick side i think
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