So this is my first real experience with moly based lithium grease (I've usually just used standard lithium grease). I figure that since these moly greases are advertised as great for high pressure applications that it should be a no brainer to pick moly based lithium greases over standard lithium. I picked up a tube of Valvoline Moly EP grease with the intention of using it on my driveshaft u-joints, sliding yoke, and etc.
Recently, I picked up a set of OEM Toyota lower ball joints to replace on my 4Runner. These 4Runners have a dangerous safety problem in that the lower ball joints are non-fail safe, so I figure just for added protection, I'd replace the grease in the ball joint with this high pressure Moly based grease. So I wiped off all the stock white sticky grease and proceeded to re-grease the joint with Moly EP.
INTERESTING NOTE: After I greased my ball joint, I noticed that as I flexed the joint, the moly EP grease did NOT seem to stick to the metal ball in the joint very well! I should have taken pictures to help with the explaining, but basically, the stock white Toyota grease was pretty sticky, and as such, it seemed to coat the metal ball in the joint much better (not perfectly, but better). In comparison, the moly grease seemed to just get displaced/wiped off from the ball surface as it rotated.
Now I am no lube expert, but my intuition tells me this is not a good characteristic to have. I would want the grease coating the metal contact area (in this case, the ball in the ball joint). I could see this as not being a problem with rotating bearings, where the rotation action would re-replenish and force grease back into contact areas. In other joints like u-joints, ball joints, sliding yokes, there is no "replenishing" action and the grease just gets dispersed.
Anyone have thoughts on this? Are all moly based greases like this, or am I overthinking?
Recently, I picked up a set of OEM Toyota lower ball joints to replace on my 4Runner. These 4Runners have a dangerous safety problem in that the lower ball joints are non-fail safe, so I figure just for added protection, I'd replace the grease in the ball joint with this high pressure Moly based grease. So I wiped off all the stock white sticky grease and proceeded to re-grease the joint with Moly EP.
INTERESTING NOTE: After I greased my ball joint, I noticed that as I flexed the joint, the moly EP grease did NOT seem to stick to the metal ball in the joint very well! I should have taken pictures to help with the explaining, but basically, the stock white Toyota grease was pretty sticky, and as such, it seemed to coat the metal ball in the joint much better (not perfectly, but better). In comparison, the moly grease seemed to just get displaced/wiped off from the ball surface as it rotated.
Now I am no lube expert, but my intuition tells me this is not a good characteristic to have. I would want the grease coating the metal contact area (in this case, the ball in the ball joint). I could see this as not being a problem with rotating bearings, where the rotation action would re-replenish and force grease back into contact areas. In other joints like u-joints, ball joints, sliding yokes, there is no "replenishing" action and the grease just gets dispersed.
Anyone have thoughts on this? Are all moly based greases like this, or am I overthinking?