Dumb Grease Question

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by newsmail, May 9, 2007.

  1. newsmail

    newsmail Guest

    I have a 2002 Dodge Caravan.
    I went to grease the front grease fittings on the suspension and
    steering components (zirc fittings), and my trusty grease gun of 20
    something years wouldn't work!
    The symptom is, the grease gun fitting is slightly too large, and the
    grease just oozes out and doesn't go in. I tried using all my strength
    to hold the grease gun fitting onto the zirc fitting, but it still oozed
    out because the zirc nipples are a bit smaller than normal. This is
    true for the left and right sides.
    This same grease gun works fine on my 2 GM cars.
    I looked in the store, thinking that maybe they've come out with new
    grease fittings since 20 years ago, but all I see are one size, and the
    same size as what I have.
    Am I missing something here?
     
    newsmail, May 9, 2007
    #1
  2. newsmail

    maxpower Guest

    Yea, your probably missing the grease fittings, some years and I believe
    that is one of them does NOT have grease fittings, look carefully and make
    sure you have them.

    Glenn Beasley
    Chrysler Tech
     
    maxpower, May 9, 2007
    #2
  3. newsmail

    Ken Weitzel Guest

    Hi...

    Yikes, another flashback for a real old guy :)

    When they first started that, I could only find a coupla
    places to grease. Had a heck of a time getting grease in
    the brake bleeder valves :)

    Take care.

    Ken
     
    Ken Weitzel, May 9, 2007
    #3
  4. newsmail

    maxpower Guest

    You have to crack the bleeders first!!! LOL
     
    maxpower, May 9, 2007
    #4
  5. newsmail

    Richard Guest

    In the good old days I owned a 1956 190SL. It sported over 20 grease
    fittings. Several would fill with water and splash all over the service
    guy's face when he tried to fill the fittings. On MB's top of the line
    vehicle they had a grease tank and lines running to the fittings. The driver
    merely had to push down on a pedal to force grease into the fittings. Talk
    about overkill.

    Richard.
     
    Richard, May 9, 2007
    #5
  6. newsmail

    Doug Guest

    Central greasing from a reservoir and floor pedal was not uncommon in
    luxury cars. Quite a few American and British cars of the 20's and
    30's had that.

    I used to have a 1971 Avanti II that used what was basically the
    Studebaker Lark convertible chassis.
    The front end alone had over 19 grease fittings. The rear axle
    bearings, spring shackles, etc added a few more. The quicklube type
    places hated the car...
    :)

    Doug
     
    Doug, May 10, 2007
    #6
  7. newsmail

    Nate Nagel Guest

    You had grease fittings for the rear axle bearings? I bet that someone
    had tore the rear end out and replaced it with an old Studebaker one,
    they dropped those in 57-58ish. Unless N&A reintroduced them...

    you do go through a lot of grease with one of those cars. The kingpins
    alone take an incredible amount of grease, but unless you get the thrust
    bearings greased up well, it'll be hard to steer and "sticky."

    nate

    (worked on too many Studes)
     
    Nate Nagel, May 12, 2007
    #7
  8. newsmail

    Bob AZ Guest

    All

    My 31 Buick was that way. Never did get all the lines cleaned out.

    Bob AZ
     
    Bob AZ, May 12, 2007
    #8
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