I have a bottle of this product and I have a question for you, does it really dry? When I spray mine on something it does not dry completely, it leaves a thin film of transparent grease that might or might not contain PTFE, not sure how to check that and I have doubts since it is not dry like they said. Does yours dry completely, meaning that my bottle could have received the wrong contents or is it normal for this lubricant to not really be dry?
The reason why they ‘spin so nice’ is that you’ve degreased the bearings. The viscosity of the original grease offers the resistance. They pretty much junk now.
What are you talking about. Skateboard bearings are often exposed to elements. That’s why they allow the use of it being open and taken apart. Do you even skateboard??
@@Nirvezz so the way a ball bearing works is continuously rolling so theres no friction on one spot, grease is that provides that, when you use that spray, it acted like a solvent till it stiffens up and creates that protective film with PTFE particles, but that problem is PTFE spray ist meant for closed systems like ball bearings, its use is for open systems, my advice clean bearings with wd 40 and 99% alcohol, then put some lithium grease.
@@dmegzel I just use a drop of tri-flow now. A little grease is fine but for skateboarding bearings, it’ll just muck up a lot easier with dirt. No idea if you skateboard at all but it’s easily exposed to the elements in outdoors. I’m not exactly excessing in long speeds when I skateboard, I usually roll enough to do tricks.
Is this better for bike chains than the little bottle of WD40 Dry Bike Chain Lube? That doesn't have PTFE, costs the same, has less product but is marketed/made specifically for bike chains.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought Teflon was the brand name for polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
You got it
Why is there so much hate on these dry lube videos?!?
I think i'm gonna buy this, and use it to lubricate bearings on my drum pedals
Suppose to shake before using.
I have a bottle of this product and I have a question for you, does it really dry? When I spray mine on something it does not dry completely, it leaves a thin film of transparent grease that might or might not contain PTFE, not sure how to check that and I have doubts since it is not dry like they said.
Does yours dry completely, meaning that my bottle could have received the wrong contents or is it normal for this lubricant to not really be dry?
The reason why they ‘spin so nice’ is that you’ve degreased the bearings. The viscosity of the original grease offers the resistance. They pretty much junk now.
What are you talking about. Skateboard bearings are often exposed to elements. That’s why they allow the use of it being open and taken apart. Do you even skateboard??
@@Nirvezz so the way a ball bearing works is continuously rolling so theres no friction on one spot, grease is that provides that, when you use that spray, it acted like a solvent till it stiffens up and creates that protective film with PTFE particles, but that problem is PTFE spray ist meant for closed systems like ball bearings, its use is for open systems, my advice clean bearings with wd 40 and 99% alcohol, then put some lithium grease.
@@dmegzel I just use a drop of tri-flow now. A little grease is fine but for skateboarding bearings, it’ll just muck up a lot easier with dirt. No idea if you skateboard at all but it’s easily exposed to the elements in outdoors. I’m not exactly excessing in long speeds when I skateboard, I usually roll enough to do tricks.
I sprayed this on my bike frame to help stop mud sticking but it made no difference whatsoever. Maybe I'll try GT85?
How long did they last after using this dry lube im considering using it
Sorry late reply. For my skateboard bearings I ended up using it every few days but it did keep the grime away
3 YEARS LATER in the SpongeBob voice lol thanks bro
@@slicktmi lol 🤣😆🤣
@@FSX239 🤣😅
Is this better for bike chains than the little bottle of WD40 Dry Bike Chain Lube? That doesn't have PTFE, costs the same, has less product but is marketed/made specifically for bike chains.
Yeah same like you, I'm curious if using this product for my bike chain
I bet you can use this dry lube in your car windows
9 mins to say what could have been said in 9 seconds… and if you want them to last - put grease back in!
Does it work for door locks?
Yes
Is it good for forklift chains?
Yes.
Poor bearings, poor poor bearings.
Why did u pity the bearings?