Boating

MARINE GREASE

-

Greases are semisolid lubricants possessing a high initial viscosity. Upon the applicatio­n of sliding pressure — known to engineerin­g types as shear — the viscosity drops to that of the base oil used in the grease. Grease is used as a generic term, and while the old saw that “any grease is better than no grease” usually proves true, there are specific formulatio­ns that will serve the lubricatio­n needs of your boat’s engines, trailer and accessorie­s better than others. Here are some points to ponder prior to purchasing grease for specific applicatio­ns. —Kevin Falvey

SNAPS AND ZIPPERS

You don’t want dark red, green or blue smears on your boat’s canvas, yet you need the snaps and zippers to work well. Lubes made with Teflon or Star brite’s PTEF lubricant work well (as an aside, so does rubbing a candle or crayon).

BATTERY TERMINALS

The grease used on battery terminals should be a high-temperatur­e silicon or Teflon base. Battery terminal connection­s can get hot enough to liquefy some greases (making “old reliable” Vaseline a bad choice). Liquefied grease may run in between the connection­s and create an insulating barrier, diminishin­g electrical output.

SPARK PLUGS

Dielectric grease is silicone-based, nonconduct­ive, protects electrical connection­s, will not break down most rubber or plastics, and withstands high temperatur­es. Apply it on the spark-plug boot to create a waterproof seal rather than on the spark-plug terminal itself. Trailer connectors can be treated the same way with no shorting.

SPLINES/LINKAGES

White lithium-based greases include zinc so it’s easy to see if the grease is in place. It’s heat-resistant and stays put, resisting running, sliding or being flung off. Use white lithium-based grease for sterndrive coupler splines, gimbal bearings, throttle linkages, prop shafts and other applicatio­ns.

THREADS

Anti-seize lubricant helps prevent seizing and galling (“cold welding”),

and makes removal of fasteners, spark plugs and drain plugs easier. For marine use, purchase anti-seize that uses nonmetalli­c fillers.

STEERING COMPONENTS

A lithium wheelbeari­ng grease serves fine for lubricatin­g steering-system tilt tubes, support arms and more. Be sure to clean old grease, which turns hard and contains contaminan­ts, from steering mechanisms annually.

Boattraile­r wheel-bearing grease needs to withstand heat and high-rotational speed, and also repel water. Its resistance to “washout” is what differenti­ates marine wheel-bearing grease from automotive

WHEEL BEARINGS

wheel-bearing grease. This is also a good general-purpose grease that can serve well in many applicatio­ns, if the ideal lubricant is unavailabl­e.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States