Jim Watson
Member
Love me some grease that "penetrates metal surfaces." And oil in "the pores of the steel."
I think this pretty much applies to all of them. With any of them, "a little dab will do ya" as they used to say.They put someone on the phone who said he was a chemist, and one of the interesting things he said was that when you applied it to the guns, and rubbed it around the areas you wanted lubed, if you could still see the white color afterward, you'd applied too much.
Yeaaahhhhh......Love me some grease that "penetrates metal surfaces." And oil in "the pores of the steel."
I think this pretty much applies to all of them. With any of them, "a little dab will do ya" as they used to say.
Generally I shy away from "boutique" lubes & such,slide glide
My paternal grandfather was a steam railroader, for whom oiliness was next to Godliness. Ever see the size of the oil can on a steam engine?Yeah, even with SIG's emphasis on the metal-framed pistols being 'wet guns' (their words). They repeated that a lot in the armorer class, and even the written test had a fill-in-the-blanks question for how to tell if sufficient lubrication is present, with the answers being confirming its present by seeing it and feeling it, or sight & touch.
Generally I shy away from "boutique" lubes & such,
But I might have to try some of THAT.
Reading some of the Amazon reviews, however, emphasizes thin coating or it collects powder residue.
But the that applies to all greases