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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*Girling\s+grease\?\s*$/: 9 ]

Total 9 documents matching your query.

1. Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: C5813@aol.com
Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 12:47:09 -0400
A recent tech tip suggests using "Girling Grease" prior to installing radiator hoses. This is said to make the removal process easier later on. Anybody ever try this? Is "Girling Grease" available an
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00001.html (7,146 bytes)

2. Re: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: David Woolf <Tigers@dwoolf.demon.co.uk>
Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:32:34 +0100
Hello, A old time garage mechanic told me his tip was to use Petroleum Jelly. Regards, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dave Woolf ("'\-/'").___..--''"-._ SUNBEAM ALPINE
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00003.html (8,341 bytes)

3. Re: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: Doug Pruitt <Douglas.Pruitt@nist.gov>
Date: Thu, 2 May 1996 11:23:49 -0400
I have not tried this but how about silicone grease. It helps when removing spark plug wires. Doug Pruitt (301) 975-6419 Maryland Point!
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00004.html (7,690 bytes)

4. Re: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: Roland Dudley <cobra@cdc.hp.com>
Date: Thu, 2 May 96 9:15:11 PDT
Girling Grease is available, but probably a bit expensive for this use. I found some at a local speed shop that sells Girling master and slave cylinders. A very small tube of the stuff cost $11. Gue
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00005.html (8,231 bytes)

5. Re[2]: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: LeBrun@hii.hitachi.com
Date: Thu, 02 May 96 09:31:11 PST
Petroleum base ANYTHING is detrimental to ANY natural rubber product. The heat will just speed up the process. If you're REAL CAREFUL & it's the old hose, you can use a big pair of channel locks and
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00006.html (9,073 bytes)

6. Re[2]: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: LeBrun@hii.hitachi.com
Date: Thu, 02 May 96 09:36:25 PST
Anti-freeze is best. Any scuba divers out there? Recall what you usually do to your mask before a dive? Works good on radiator hoses too. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00007.html (8,637 bytes)

7. Re: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: Chris Richards <cjr7@axe.humboldt.edu>
Date: Thu, 02 May 1996 21:27 -0700 (PDT)
I simply use a "special tool" when removing hoses. Mine is made by snap-on but there are many variations. It's a beveled-pointed special angled variation of a screwdriver. It never fails me. Even on
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00011.html (7,796 bytes)

8. RE: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: "Richard Atherton (Entex)" <a-richat@MICROSOFT.com>
Date: Thu, 2 May 1996 23:55:49 -0700
No. I used to work in the Aerospace/Jet Engines division of G.E., and we used good ol' Vasaline on neoprene rubber O-rings throughout the assembly of the fuel-flow transmitters that I worked on. I ha
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00012.html (9,442 bytes)

9. Re[2]: Girling grease? (score: 1)
Author: LeBrun@hii.hitachi.com
Date: Fri, 03 May 96 09:37:12 PST
Most O-rings I've worked with over the years are either VITON or BUNA, trade names for compounds resitant to most stuff. Only in the semicondutor etch world did I encounter real weird rubber compound
/html/tigers/1996-05/msg00023.html (10,442 bytes)


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