Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: Rubber Grease

  1. #1
    Senior Member Ribrickulous's Avatar
    Join Date
    06.08.20
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY, USA
    Posts
    1,519
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    480
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    351
    Thanked in
    284 Posts

    Rubber Grease

    Just a quick product recommendation.

    A guy in my garage saw me using white lithium grease on some rubber grommets and recommended this red gel called rubber grease. Looked like it was 40 years old, made from vegetable oil.

    I found a comparable new product from Toyota that uses propylene glycol and lithium as the lubricant instead of oil based stuff.

    Doesn’t degrade or swell the rubber so everything (o rings, seals, grommets) all stay the size they’re supposed to.

    Original rubber grease: https://www.amazon.com/GENUINE-Corro...59645110&psc=1

    Propylene Glycol rubber grease: https://www.ebay.com/itm/New-Genuine...-127632-2357-0

    Both great products. I post because I’ve seen more than a few people around here struggling with grommets and tabs etc… this has helped a huge deal.


    -Ed
    1972 CL350
    1985 VF700F
    Ed
    1972 CL350 K4
    1985 VF700F

  2. #2
    Benevolent Dictator ancientdad's Avatar
    Join Date
    05.21.20
    Location
    Nature Coast, FL
    Posts
    17,887
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    3,123
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    4,707
    Thanked in
    3,637 Posts
    I like the idea, but actually I've always used white lithium grease on sidecover tabs and have never had any issues with the grommets swelling. Either way, a little would last a long time so it would be a relatively cheap investment.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Ribrickulous's Avatar
    Join Date
    06.08.20
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY, USA
    Posts
    1,519
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    480
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    351
    Thanked in
    284 Posts

    Rubber Grease

    Yeah, it’s been my go-to since I found it - replacing radiator mounts, fairing grommets etc on the interceptor, all those tough ones that wrap around an interior hole. Knock on wood but they’ve been great.

    It’s less slippery than the white lithium stuff, thicker too, which I think has been helping with installation.

    Ostensibly you can use it for just about any brake work also, but I’d worry about it holding up to the heat near the calipers.

    Maybe I’m just worrying about something I don’t know enough about, though.


    -Ed
    1972 CL350
    1985 VF700F
    Ed
    1972 CL350 K4
    1985 VF700F

  4. #4
    Benevolent Dictator ancientdad's Avatar
    Join Date
    05.21.20
    Location
    Nature Coast, FL
    Posts
    17,887
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    3,123
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    4,707
    Thanked in
    3,637 Posts
    Better to be concerned than not.

  5. #5
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    06.01.20
    Location
    Worcester, England
    Posts
    1,752
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    134
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    547
    Thanked in
    407 Posts
    Red rubber grease is good stuff. I've been using it for ages on the side panel grommets, also on the air filter hoses, and on the air box rubbers on my 600/4. I think it was originally intended for use in hydraulic braking systems, lubing rubber seals when fitting new ones. I wouldn't use it there though, prefer to just use brake fluid on seals, and high temp silicon brake grease on caliper pistons and sliding pins. Brembo make a suitable grease.
    1972 CL175K7
    1970 CB174K4, 'upgraded' to a K6 alike
    1971 SL175, with a few non standard parts !
    1998 CB600 Hornet

  6. #6
    Senior Member WintrSol's Avatar
    Join Date
    06.02.20
    Location
    Florissant, MO
    Posts
    252
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    2
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    110
    Thanked in
    88 Posts
    Red rubber grease for me, too. Plant-based instead of petroleum, so won't harm rubber. I also use it around the door seals on my autos, in place of the silicone grease that GM recommends.
    ~1970 CB450 (junkyard dog), 1998 Valkyrie, black with lots of chrome

  7. #7
    Senior Member FrisianWheel's Avatar
    Join Date
    06.03.20
    Location
    Berlin, Germany
    Posts
    283
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    100
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    136
    Thanked in
    92 Posts

    Rubber Grease

    I literally stick to Dow Corning High Vacuum Grease (I think it's called Molycote now). I'm using it on all rubber parts that I think need to be greased. It's very sticky (hence the name), made for rubber parts in ventilation systems and has suitable specifications for motorcycle use.
    Gunnar

    CB450 K5 - Rider
    CB450 K5 - Project
    CB500T '75 - Rider

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •