Dr. Watson Posted November 13, 2010 Posted November 13, 2010 Well it has been said before and it was on here once or twice, but I never really saw anyone that tried it. What I have done is put the Dry-lubed worm gear (level wind gear) theory to test. All I have to say is IT really WORKS. Heres what works the best, take your baitcaster apart just enough to remove the worm gear or do it with your regular maintenance. Remove all old grease or oil, which ever you use, and wipe dry all the parts (worm gear, level wind guide rod, worm gear housing, the level wind itself, and the level wind prawl). After all of that you need your "dry lube," I picked up Remington Rem Dry-lube spray in the gun cleaning section at sports authority for $6. Spray a light coat on the guide rod, prawl, and all sides of the worm gear. It will dry into a powdery residue. Put the parts back together, work the reel a little bit to work in the coat of lube, and now you have a worm gear that is protected from the elements as well as grit and grime. Try it out and see for yourself. Quote
trevor Posted November 14, 2010 Posted November 14, 2010 Thanks for the idea! I'll have to try that. Quote
Super User BASSclary Posted November 14, 2010 Super User Posted November 14, 2010 How does the smoothness compare, to say, grease on the worm gear? Because I just put a nice coat of Reel Butter grease on mine. Quote
Dr. Watson Posted November 15, 2010 Author Posted November 15, 2010 How does the smoothness compare, to say, grease on the worm gear? Because I just put a nice coat of Reel Butter grease on mine. it feels just as smooth, but it won't get stuff stuck in it. try it out and be the judge, it can't hurt anything. Quote
Super User .RM. Posted November 15, 2010 Super User Posted November 15, 2010 How does the smoothness compare, to say, grease on the worm gear? Because I just put a nice coat of Reel Butter grease on mine. An old school rule of reel service, "never add any grease to moving parts that are exposed to the elements"............ Tight Lines! Quote
Delaware Valley Tackle Posted November 15, 2010 Posted November 15, 2010 How does the smoothness compare, to say, grease on the worm gear? Because I just put a nice coat of Reel Butter grease on mine. An old school rule of reel service, "never add any grease to moving parts that are exposed to the elements"............ Tight Lines! x2 Quote
Super User BASSclary Posted November 15, 2010 Super User Posted November 15, 2010 Yikes! Well next time I clean and lube ill give it a shot Quote
piscicidal Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 Well it has been said before and it was on here once or twice, but I never really saw anyone that tried it. What I have done is put the Dry-lubed worm gear (level wind gear) theory to test. All I have to say is IT really WORKS. Heres what works the best, take your baitcaster apart just enough to remove the worm gear or do it with your regular maintenance. Remove all old grease or oil, which ever you use, and wipe dry all the parts (worm gear, level wind guide rod, worm gear housing, the level wind itself, and the level wind prawl). After all of that you need your "dry lube," I picked up Remington Rem Dry-lube spray in the gun cleaning section at sports authority for $6. Spray a light coat on the guide rod, prawl, and all sides of the worm gear. It will dry into a powdery residue. Put the parts back together, work the reel a little bit to work in the coat of lube, and now you have a worm gear that is protected from the elements as well as grit and grime. Try it out and see for yourself. Thanks! This is a really good tip! I'm servicing a bunch of reels right now...I'm going to try this on one or two. It seems like the "drier" I run the worm gear, the better casting distance I get. Of course, I understand the downside of running the worm/pawl too dry.... Quote
Super User J Francho Posted November 23, 2010 Super User Posted November 23, 2010 Thanks! This is a really good tip! I'm servicing a bunch of reels right now...I'm going to try this on one or two.It seems like the "drier" I run the worm gear, the better casting distance I get. Of course, I understand the downside of running the worm/pawl too dry.... On all but a few larger, round baitcasters, the levelwind is fully disengaged from the spool on the cast, and it make zero difference in casting distance whether you used dry lube or honey in there. Unless that line guide whizzes back and forth while the spool spins in freespool, then those gains are imaginary. Quote
piscicidal Posted November 23, 2010 Posted November 23, 2010 yeah I know the levelwind doesn't spin during the cast. The reel seems "smoother" when running the pawl dry. You're correct there is no logical reason to coorelate that to casting distance. It's probably in my head (imaginary)... Quote
Dr. Watson Posted November 24, 2010 Author Posted November 24, 2010 Thanks for the comments guys, I've been using it since I posted this topic and the lube seems to be holding steady, I really like it. Quote
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