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Skip Gundlach wrote:
That's *exactly* what I did. I took off the base, put the piston at the highest point, and then thoroughly swabbed the entire cylinder (since it was difficult to control, I did the part under the stroke a bit, too) with the non-petroleum swimming pool supplier Teflon grease you'd previously recommended.") How was that insufficient (as asserted in your last)? It was your use of the word "swabbed," Skip, instead of "smeared." Knowing your penchant for meticulous detail, that produced a vision of your using a Q-Tip to meticulously coat the cylinder with a thin coat of the grease--and then you asked if you should also put some on the o-ring...vs giving it a healthy squirt and using whatever works to spread it all over the inside the cylinder, which would also coat the o-ring and everything else on the pump shaft when you pumped. You can't use too much of it--it's water soluble, so any excess that's forced out won't hurt anything and would actually benefit any y-valve in the head discharge line, but you can use too little to last very long...and it appeared that's what you'd done. And unless you "swabbed" at least a tablespoon of it, I'm still not sure you didn't. -- Peggie ---------- Peggie Hall Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987 Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor" http://shop.sailboatowners.com/books...ku=90&cat=1304 |
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