[AT] General questions
John Hall
jtchall at nc.rr.com
Mon Nov 13 19:13:44 PST 2017
I have used engine oil, gear lube and spray cans of chain lube (from
Deere). All of them make a mess all over the machine, which in turn gets
messier when you run it. I don't really know if oiling chains is
necessary. Think of combine elevator chains, they run in filth and
never get oiled. ATV chains never get oiled. Lately, I haven't been
oiling any of my chains--if i make an exception it is with a few drops
of gear lube. I will say I have replaced a lot of combine, baler and
planter chains with the foreign made chain that Shoup sells--that seems
to help more than oiling some of my worn out chains. Interested in how
others maintain their chains as well.
John Hall
On 11/13/2017 9:23 PM, Spencer Yost wrote:
> I have two general questions that I have always wanted answers to, and I seem too intellectually challenged enough to solve on my own:
>
> How do you oil very long chains(i.e. my baler or sawmill) without wasting tons of oil and making a mess? I sit there with a plunger style oil can and oil when it's running. But even that seems sub optimal. There has to be a better way?
>
> As Dean VP indicated in an earlier post, I should use WD-40 to hunt for vacuum leaks on my 430. I have done that before, and I did it again with the 430(to no avail). But I did hear many years ago that the only reason that WD40 used to work is because butane was the propellant and it no longer is the propellant. Is that true? Is there a better way to find vacuum leaks? An unlit propane torch came to mind but sounded dangerous.
>
> Thanks! Inquiring minds want to know.
>
> Spencer Yost
>
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