LCA grease? worth it?
i'm going to be buying the lower controlling arms and relocation brackets soon and was wondering whether or not i would need the grease that many sites give an option for? do they not come greased?
the site i'm using gives the options for Poly grease and Rod End grease at an extra 29$ for both, is it worth it? or is there a better solution elsewhere for the grease?
as stated in my sig, my car is completely stock at the moment. I want to start into the suspension and chassis before working my way into the horsepower and/or transmission sides of things....
i'm going to be buying the lower controlling arms and relocation brackets soon and was wondering whether or not i would need the grease that many sites give an option for? do they not come greased?
the site i'm using gives the options for Poly grease and Rod End grease at an extra 29$ for both, is it worth it? or is there a better solution elsewhere for the grease?
as stated in my sig, my car is completely stock at the moment. I want to start into the suspension and chassis before working my way into the horsepower and/or transmission sides of things....
http://www.bmrfabrication.com/F4.htm
Last edited by BMR Tech2; Sep 25, 2009 at 08:38 AM.
The grease we sell is a very high quality good grease but it is expensive. If you go to your local auto parts store I am sure you can find a similar item for a little less expensive. We recommend to grease the control arms every time you change your oil with just 1-2 pumps of grease. The rod end lube we sell is a graphite spray that dries on the rod end, it protects it from rusting.
If I can help anymore please ask. Thank you!
Ryan
I found it locally at a car parts store (Pep Boys, etc.)
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We recommend going with a Synthetic based lube. I am sure you can find it at a hardware or auto parts store....or if not see if either one can order it for you.
Take it easy
Brad
For the rod ends use a graphite based spray on bushings use a synthetic based grease.
EDIT: so far, Dri-Slide is what i've come up with will that work alright?
Last edited by pheer; Sep 25, 2009 at 11:12 AM.
The synthetic oils where developed at the dawn of the jet age in the 50s. Jet engines have turbines that must operate at extremely high rpms at temperatures ranging upto 40 below zero. They are also known for their slipperiness due to the additive packs. I am not trying to down play the use of good quality anything, but conventional type marine grease works fine. You do not need silicon based grease.
I am sure this may set off a fire storm of critics, but your poly bushings will work well with conventional marine type grease. Besides Neoprene, a polyurethane compound, is routinely used for wheel bearing, transmission seals etc., to seal conventional oils and greases.
Also, if you follow UMI's advise and grease the car at every oil change, you'll be fine, and don't lose any sleep over it. Hope this helps. Red.




