Results 16 to 20 of 20
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23 July 2018, 04:08 #16
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23 July 2018, 04:49 #17
Honestly I’ve been fooled enough to know that some small gun Lube company is in no way competing with the big corp’s for lubrication research and development. And anyone with knowledge of firearms and combustion engines know that if a Lube excels in a engine it has 100 times more capabilities then required to protect a firearm.
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25 July 2018, 16:02 #18
I bought some. I didn't need all 5 so I bought a mix and match.
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25 July 2018, 17:13 #19
I let myself get caught up in the "lube wars" of '013's till they died out a bit back in the '17's. How foolish. I think I came to my senses after my foray into the "astounding" world of frog lube, and found rifles in the safe with thick gummy crap clogging their arteries. Not only Frog Lube, but every new thing some "well known gunslinger" was touting as the next best thing since smokeless powder. Then it dawned on me that EWL was working great for me, what the heck am I screwing with all of this foolishness for.
Still using it.
Want to really start a fight? Go on a Harley forum and ask... "what's the best oil?". Just kidding....never...ever do that.
FTNRA Life Member
Basket full of Deplorables Life Member
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25 July 2018, 18:24 #20
My first thought after reading most of the article and then looking at the product was the same as sinners. Why a lube for cold weather also? The product looks and sounds decent but what I am using works and works well for the drastic temp swings in Minnesota. I use Slip EWL combined with the Slip EWL grease that comes in a syringe. A decent coat of the oil and a few dabs of the grease on the slide rails of my pistols and in the charging handle slides in the upper on my rifles. Its like they are riding on ball bearings. In the winter I just back down on the grease to a bare minimum.
The best way to survive a violent encounter is to be the one inflicting the most violence.