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grease preference

bigford

Member
54
4
8
Location
Alvin, Texas
Just curious as to what type of grease you use in your front axles. Doing a search, NLGI #2 lithium seems to be the most common. (Thanks to stumps for some good info in a 2010 post.)
Also is there a source for the GAA?
I was swapping some parts around on my axles and one of the donor ones had what looked like a fresh rebuild. I had some disc brake grease that I had planned to use but after comparing it to the (or what I think is) GAA, I'm not going to do it. Seems to be too thin.
Thanks
 

5tonman1971

New member
323
0
0
Location
Lima ohio
Are you talking about wheel bearings? Or differential lube or are you talking about the king pins and such. For all u joints,bushings,king pins, ball joints, any where there's a grease zert I use "green grease" it's water proof heavy duty and works really well. And it's green that's another plus.
 

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juanprado

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
5,510
2,713
113
Location
Metairie/La (N'awlins)
Any of the modern greases that are multi purpose and rated for Wheel Bearings, U-Joints, ball joints and front end, etc are light years ahead of the peanut butter looking GAA.There has been tremendous tech improvement in grease be it red, blue, or green in the last 20 years. Most of the ones out there are water proof or resistant and have millions of miles in HD fleets. There is also synthetic products. Any name brand modern rated grease will do the job.

First time I saw GAA when servicing my truck it looked more like soap based lithium that I was selling 30 years ago when I started in parts and gooped into drum brakes. The automotive and hd world has moved away from those products to a better product.

Personally, I like the red stuff.
 

bigford

Member
54
4
8
Location
Alvin, Texas
Thanks for the comments. Just waiting on some seals to come in and then back together she goes.
Also in the for-what-it's-worth column, these drum / hub assys aren't the easiest to take off. After fighting a couple, I had an idea. Keep in mind that adding 15 to 20 lbs more weight to the hubs is just what they need. Using 2 lugnuts and the front part of a spare FMTV rim, I bolted it on to the hub to use as leverage and something to grip with. Seemed to go a lot easier...
 
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