What's the difference? Automotive wheel bearing grease (The kind I used to pack my TR-4's wheel bearings with) or bicycle bearing grease? Wonder what they used back in the 50's at the factory.
Phillips omniguard is what I would dye and re-sell as a low toxicity bicycle grease. Calcium sulfonate with a borate ester.Hi Folks,
Kestas, thanks for the comments about specific needs for headset grease.
I work some with kids and bikes so am currently using low-toxicity Crystal Grease:
https://www.whitelightningco.com/products/grease/crystal-grease
It's kinda pricey.
Any suggestions for other low-toxicity greases and/or oils, at lower cost?
Thanks and good health, Weogo
What's the difference? Automotive wheel bearing grease (The kind I used to pack my TR-4's wheel bearings with) or bicycle bearing grease? Wonder what they used back in the 50's at the factory.
Look for food-grade greases... greases that are appropriate to use in food production equipment.Hi Folks,
Kestas, thanks for the comments about specific needs for headset grease.
I work some with kids and bikes so am currently using low-toxicity Crystal Grease:
https://www.whitelightningco.com/products/grease/crystal-grease
It's kinda pricey.
Any suggestions for other low-toxicity greases and/or oils, at lower cost?
Thanks and good health, Weogo
This is only partially true. Most of the bearings in modern bikes are sealed cartridges. Those seals work pretty well, I've seen bearings having thousands of miles with no contamination. But of course the seals aren't perfect and the bearings can get contaminated. You can use a fine pick to pop off the seals without damaging them, clean and inspect the bearings, regrease them, and pop the seals back on. If you do this servicing prophylactically before the bearings get rough, and use higher quality than the OEM grease, you can greatly extend the life of the bearings. If the bearings are press-fit, you can do this servicing without removing the bearing, or you can remove it by pressing it out instead of whacking it out (which pits the bearings, making them unserviceable).... Also, because bicycle bearings are not sealed and open to the elements, using a calcium-based grease (as suggested by many) is a good first choice