Lubricants have a long history, started thousands of years ago. Earlier, Egyptians used water and oil to decrease the friction between sled and sand. Earlier in the 20th century, only vegetables, minerals, and grease oils were used for lubrication purposes. However, in the 21st century,
Synthetic oils, solid lubricants, and water-gas based lubricants were introduced, changing the entire industry. All surfaces of nature are rough, and when these surfaces slide against each other, it generates friction. A lubricants' work is to separate these surfaces using a lubricant layer to prevent any form of direct contact or the materials.
How to buy the right lubricant
As mentioned, there are many types of lubricants available. Different greases are used to reduce the friction between different types of components. There are liquid lubricants- mineral, natural, and synthetic oils; solid lubricants- powders, coatings, and graphite composites, Molybdenum disulfide, and others; gaseous lubricants and semi-solid lubricants. The liquid lubricants can be further divided into another group that consists of- hydrocarbon-based oils, non-hydrocarbon synthetic oils, water containing lubricants, and fats.
Applications and benefits
Lubricants are perfect for tight tolerance applications. These applications include- woodworking and trade tools, electrical switches and connectors, outdoor power equipment, cutting blades, driving belts, and bushings. Lubricants are also helpful for applications like- chains, gears, cables, tracks, slides, drill bits, saws, fishing, cycling, sailing, and marine. Reducing friction and removing abrasives from hinges, locks, fasteners, sliding surfaces, blades, bulb threads, mowers, garden equipment, drive belts, and bushings is also easy when using a lubricant. Use lubricants that are dry and clean and repel abrasive contaminants. Once the solvent evaporates or dries up, the remaining lubricant is going to be non-flammable.
Durability and longevity
Consumers shouldn't be worried about the lubricants' longevity as they come in sealed cylindrical or cubical packages that prevent the lubricants from spilling or leaking out. To get excellent results, always store the lubricants at room temperature. Direct exposure to heat should be avoided.
Categories Simillar to Industrial Lubricants includes Filament Tape, Foam Tape and Friction Tape