I know most members here will know that putting grease in Phantoms is not necessary or even recommended but had to get this off my mind. I just tore down a used phantom last night that was externally pretty clean looking but not pumping very smoothly. When I started tearing it down I found copious amounts of white[ish] grease (DOW 33?] packed into the trigger frame the valve train and the pump arm slot. It was packed in there like it had a Zerk fitting and a grease gun was used. When I finally got every thing apart there was a lot of grease, loads for grit and fair amount of rust (hammer, pump arm and spring). All of this was holding "water" (why the rust) and the everything that moves or has things moving against it had a fair amount of wear. Phantoms do not use grease, in fact for most any pump marker a very little [emphasis on very little] amount of synthetic air tool oil is all it needs and is meant to have for proper use. For the love of God only use grease on markers that call for grease and even then it is supposed to be a light coating not pumped in and fill every crevice.
Why you do not use grease on a Phantom:
If you intend on using grease on a Phantom please apply it "correctly" with only a very light coat but I would prefer you just stick to air tool oil (synthetic). Regardless keep your equipment reasonably clean and maintained. Not asking you to break it down every time you use it but keep it wiped off and dry before you put it away. If you take a roll in the dirt or you marker gets shot up terribly that might be a good time to tear it down give it a good cleaning and sparingly lubricate the moving parts and at a minimum at least give it a good tear down before you put it up at the end of the season or before you add it to you vanity wall and leave it hanging there.
<climbs down off soap box>
P.S. oh and by the way adding a little air tool oil to the ASA occasionally is a good way to get a little lubricant to power tube, cup seal and valve spring on a Phantom. When I tore that down on this marker thankfully there wasn't any grease but the whole valve assembly was dry (seal shrank) and looks like it has never seen oil since it was assembled.
Why you do not use grease on a Phantom:
- Not designed for it, does not need it (really that simple)
- Like most Nelson based markers the valve train is subject to getting foreign material in it (Phantoms are better the most at keeping it out but it still gets in there) and when you use grease especially a lot of it, it just collects this foreign material and turns it into lapping compound and causes excessive wear. Just the opposite of your goal when adding grease.
- If you overload the grease it traps moisture and contrary to common believed even Stainless Steel with corrode and god forbid it is touching any carbon steal (roll pins, other hardware, sear...etc.). Once you get corrosion on stainless it will keep corroding in that spot almost no matter what you do from now on.
- Add in not keeping your stuff clean after use and doing an occasional breakdown this grease just holds the moisture, grit, and corrosion byproducts against your parts. This causes conductive material in an aqueous solution then any minor electrical charge (even static electricity) and now you have galvanic corrosion which can cause serious erosion of base metals.
If you intend on using grease on a Phantom please apply it "correctly" with only a very light coat but I would prefer you just stick to air tool oil (synthetic). Regardless keep your equipment reasonably clean and maintained. Not asking you to break it down every time you use it but keep it wiped off and dry before you put it away. If you take a roll in the dirt or you marker gets shot up terribly that might be a good time to tear it down give it a good cleaning and sparingly lubricate the moving parts and at a minimum at least give it a good tear down before you put it up at the end of the season or before you add it to you vanity wall and leave it hanging there.
<climbs down off soap box>
P.S. oh and by the way adding a little air tool oil to the ASA occasionally is a good way to get a little lubricant to power tube, cup seal and valve spring on a Phantom. When I tore that down on this marker thankfully there wasn't any grease but the whole valve assembly was dry (seal shrank) and looks like it has never seen oil since it was assembled.
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