Thanks
Id suggest not using O ring grease..as it is indeed a bitch to remove.
Most repair guys simply use a thin coating of moly di, white litium etc
etc. All of which are easy to remove with a spritz can of cleaner. I
generally tend to simply use a bit of standard grease gun grease and
clean it up, then clean it again in 5-8 yrs and reapply.
Call any welding repair shop and ask em what to use if it bothers you.
Btw..the Beta Mig is a very nice old welder. Nice score!!!
Gunner
"I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion of the
means. I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not
making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of
it. In my youth I travelled much, and I observed in different
countries, that the more public provisions were made for the
poor the less they provided for themselves, and of course became
poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the
more they did for themselves, and became richer." -- Benjamin
Franklin, /The Encouragement of Idleness/, 1766
It sounds like you got a real good deal!!!!
Pete Stanaitis
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It's the stuff that you put on the pug boots and dist. cap towers
before pushing on the rubber boots. Seem to be a lighter clear
silicone grease. A lot of auto connectors use silicone grease now to
help seal out moisture. Maybe I'll give a Hobart dealer a call
tomorrow to see what they suggest. The newer machines don't use tap
switches anymore so hopefully someone remembers what they used to
used. Gunners comment is probably correct, the type of grease may not
really be that important as long as it is cleaned out once in a while.
Do NOT use silicone grease on switch contacts. The sparks will crack
the grease back down to silicon dioxide, otherwise known as sand, which
will grind the contacts up.
Hydrocarbon greases crack to carbon and carbon dioxide, which are
harmless.
Joe Gwinn
AH!!!! Thanks Joe! Excellent explaination!
That silicone dielectric grease is strictly for keeping HV from
tracking, it's not lube and not for contacts. O-ring lube is generally
meant for rubber to plastic or rubber to metal, not metal to metal.
Somewhere I've got a tube of GE contact grease meant for big switch
equipment that my dad rescued at one job site. So the right stuff is
out there, if you can find it. It's amber in color and reminds me of
the old-style wheel-bearing grease. Probably white lithium would work
as well, it's non-conductive. Easy to get off, too.
Stan