Reddit reviews Phil Wood 3-Ounce Grease Tube
We found 6 Reddit comments about Phil Wood 3-Ounce Grease Tube. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
Package Size: 3 ounce, Unit Quantity: Squeeze
We found 6 Reddit comments about Phil Wood 3-Ounce Grease Tube. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
It absolutely does. For example, SRAM's PressFit BB30 bottom brackets are very poorly greased and not known for their long lives. A new fresh layer of it does wonders for longevitiy. Me and friends have been using Phil Wood Waterproof Grease (Amazon link) with pretty good results. Marine specific bearing grease is also popular from what i've heard from others.
http://www.amazon.com/Phil-Wood-3-Ounce-Grease-Tube/dp/B000WYANAG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1345758131&sr=8-1&keywords=phil+bike+grease
some people will argue with me, but 12 dollars for three ounces of grease https://www.amazon.com/Phil-Wood-3-Ounce-Grease-Tube/dp/B000WYANAG
Anti-Seize or Anti-Seize
Grease or Grease or My personal favorite, Great wet/winter performance
Chain Lube I use Finish Line Wet. For chains I typically wax.
If you haven't the tools to get at the pawls, not to mention putting things back together... your local bike shop should be able to take care of it with some Lubriplate Mag-1 (expensive grease), ParkTool Grease (great stuff), Phil Wood Grease (amazing stuff) or perhaps some Boshield T-9 lube (light lube).
First. READ UP ON HYDRAULIC BRAKES BEFORE YOU START. DO NOT ALLOW THE LEVERS TO COMPRESS W/O A ROTOR OR BLEED BLOCK BETWEEN THE PADS OR YOU'LL HYPEREXTEND THE PISTONS. OTHERWISE:
You're lucky. If your bike has hydraulic brakes there is probably very little on your bike you can't disassemble with a set of hex keys from 2.5-10mm, possibly a T-25 torx, and a #1 Phillips screwdriver. Depending on your wheels you'll need cone wrenches to set the bearings and depending on your crankset and bottom bracket you MAY need specialty tools. To work on your cassette (I'm ASSUMING CASSETTE DUE TO HYDRAULIC BRAKES) you'll need a cassette lockring tool AND a chainwhip (or other method to hold onto the cassette).
Let's see some specs or photos.
When it comes to assembly, though, especially for the stem and saddle, torque matters.
$7 Park Polylube or $10 Phil's waterproof grease or Marine grease
and
$6 TriFlow or $8 Finish Line Dry
and
$8 lifetime supple of anti-sieze for all metal-to-metal (including threads) which does not move or get frequently disassembled
and
$16 at Sears, $10 at Harbor Freight socket-drive Allen set
0-9 nM torque wrench for $22. A VERY useful range extension over the 0-7 of the Park Tool TW-1. And do not be afraid of cheap beam wrenches! Be afraid of expensive clickers but not cheap beam!
$2 T-25 socket drive (brake rotors)
$15 chain tool
$7 cassette lockring tool
$7 shitty chainwhip (you need something to hold cassette to use cassette lockring tool)
I strongly suggest the above torque wrench (or its equivalent) for all small bolts on a bike. If you want to be safe with the big bolts (mostly on the bottom bracket and crankset depending on styles) you also need:
$25 at Sears, $15-20 at Harbor Freight or auto parts stores high-torque torque wrench (Much less often needed)
EDIT: Spelling fixes and some minor rewording.