whats so special about marine grease?

viago

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im looking at buying grease for seacocks and general purpose use and wondered how there could be any difference between standard and marine grease. im a bit sceptical but remain willing to to be convinced.
 
extra sticky with lithium or calcium as a thickener, and sometimes designed to be biodegradable (if left on the seafloor for long enough :eek:).

Some products have strong anti-weld (anti-galling) properties for use with stainless steel.


I would not hesitate to use the proper stuff.
 
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Itz like buying steel, if you buy normal stainless it looks like rust after a few months. If you buy 316 it looks like rust after a few years (if not cleaned)

Buy the marine grease or get out the chemistry books and study up
 
Itz like buying steel, if you buy normal stainless it looks like rust after a few months. If you buy 316 it looks like rust after a few years (if not cleaned)

Buy the marine grease or get out the chemistry books and study up

no need for books round here, you guys have the answers.
i tried reading about how sailing worked earlier, now i know less than when i started.
 
thanks guys, marine it is. question is with zink, lithium, calcium, all three?
blakes seems to be the only one recommended thus far.
 
thanks guys, marine it is. question is with zink, lithium, calcium, all three?
blakes seems to be the only one recommended thus far.
I prefer Keenol - lovely stuff and no adverse effects to date - works well in sea cocks, packed stern glands, bearings etc.
 
thanks guys, marine it is. question is with zink, lithium, calcium, all three?
blakes seems to be the only one recommended thus far.

Zinc additives give better boundary lubrication, specifically for steel on steel applications. Probably not often necessary on a boat.
Lithium soaps have pretty good water resistance and better high temperature properties. Most general greases for automotive use, e.g. wheel bearings, are this type.
Calcium soaps are more water resistant, rather lower heat resistance. Better for trailer wheel bearings that are immersed and in the past I used it for my stern gland.

I use a general calcium based grease for seacocks, have used it for winches but now use the nine guineas an ounce stuff sold by Lewmar, not because of any problem, just ran out of the calcium stuff.

Further good information on the topic here.
 
What's the bright blue grease as supplied by Volvo for lubricating shaft seals and by KiwiProp for lubricating - wait for it - KiwiProps?

I have a tub of Castrol Water Pump grease which says it is lime based, which Vyv's link tells me is the same as calcium based. Would that be OK for winches? Maybe better than the blue stuff? It feels slipperier.

Also I saw some particularly expensive marine grease that said it was calcium phosphonate base whereas I think the norm is stearate isn't it? Is there some advantage?
 
I have a tub of Castrol Water Pump grease which says it is lime based, which Vyv's link tells me is the same as calcium based. Would that be OK for winches? Maybe better than the blue stuff? It feels slipperier.

Also I saw some particularly expensive marine grease that said it was calcium phosphonate base whereas I think the norm is stearate isn't it? Is there some advantage?

I used Castrol Water Pump grease for years for my winches and the same stuff seems to be in my little Seawolf windlass gearbox. Good choice I would think. The Lewmar winch grease is completely different, seems to be silicone based, translucent, not a conventional grease at all.

I only know calcium phosphonate as a detergent additive in lubricating oils. No idea why it would be used in a grease. It is also used to prevent scaling in water systems, e.g. cooling towers, but that doesn't seem to be applicable here.
 
Anyone using Cannery Grease? An early boat I owned had a couple of grease gun tubes full of it, seems it was used primarily in the prop shaft packing gland.

No idea what it's properties are but it worked well in packing gland and was also used on the winches at some time.

It a fraction of the cost of marine grease but designed to tolerate water.

Good luck and fair winds. :)
 
I used Castrol Water Pump grease for years for my winches and the same stuff seems to be in my little Seawolf windlass gearbox. Good choice I would think. The Lewmar winch grease is completely different, seems to be silicone based, translucent, not a conventional grease at all.

I only know calcium phosphonate as a detergent additive in lubricating oils. No idea why it would be used in a grease. It is also used to prevent scaling in water systems, e.g. cooling towers, but that doesn't seem to be applicable here.

Winch grease is very different to other greases and needs to be thin translucent stuff. When thick grease dries out it becomes sticky and is enough to hold pawls open and cause winch slip.
 
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