Henchman wrote:Been running my Used Ryedale a few days now. I really had to lube it up with Dri Slide the first use to get it running without a jam. I figured once it was lubed decent it wouldn't need for about 50,000 pennies according to what I been reading on maintenance. However I need to reapply Dri Slide before every use, whether it be 20,000 or just 100. I'm storing the Ryedale in my garage which is pretty toasty and I cover it will a plastic bag to keep out the dust. Is that causing the Dri Slide to dry out faster? I don't mind reapplying every use but eventually it'll cost me money in Dri Slide.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Henchman
See the rest of the comments, which I echo. Just a further comment - dry-slide doesn't really dry out, a hot garage shouldn't matter in that respect - the medium that it is suspended in is only a convenience to help in the application, but once the solvent evaporates the lubrication mechanism is still there, which is powdered molybdenum disulfide.
You'll also need to scrub the wheel, clean the bed it rotates on, and perhaps most importantly clean the clear plastic slide and the chute into the comparator (with a q-tip) - those are the parts that cause the most jams when dirty, and it will get dirty fast. And the gunk that accumulates is probably stickier in a hot and/or humid environment than a cool/dry one, so you might see more jams from that issue when hot and/or humid.
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