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ISO-flex grease

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7.7K views 27 replies 21 participants last post by  Murphyboy  
#1 · (Edited)
I had to research bearing grease today for work for a high speed roll application. ISO-flex grease originally appeared to be the best choice for the application but the cost is absurd. I found their are quite a few very similar products out there and in this situation was able to choose something costing less than 10% per unit compared to iso flex grease. I have enough iso flex from a previous project currently to last a lifetime of my needs but I would probably sub in an alternate if I was in a different situation. There are far cheaper greases out there with near identical properties, the claim to fame is not the lubrication properties of iso-flex but rather the noise reduction qualities. Just something for you guys to consider. I will not blindly choose an exact product but your going to want to start by googling iso-flex special a equivalent, in a gas engine and dig from there. There are quite a few very similar options, even when you dig very deep into the chemical and physical properties. I do not consider myself a grease expert but occasionally I have to act as one for work.

Again just something to consider, although I also use Mobil 1 and standard gear case oil with complete confidence for what it is worth.
 
#6 ·
My question is why would ROTAX choose Isoflex if a cheaper alternative would doo the same job?

I'll stick with OEM spec.
This is a solid and very valid point. We honestly do not know the answer. It could be for noise reduction. The new generation of ski doo sleds seems to be all about noise and vibration reduction. It could be specifically for a “performance” quality too. Unless they tell us we do not know. I suspect they choose and top tier product which they got at a good cost due to being awarded the OEM contract but that’s only an assumption. I posted this because I noticed a very good number of other options which are extremely similar by all listed qualities. I had previously always assumed otherwise before actually searching for a replacement and the truth is, I still do not know.
 
#5 ·
I do [not] consider myself a grease expert but occasionally I have to act as one for work.
From then sentence structure I am guessing you meant to say that you were not a grease expert, but occasionally you have had to act as one for work. I too have dug into the Isoflex grease and have found interesting insights from the industrial world. I know of many other greases that have been tried on these sleds, and certain oem bearings on some engines of certain model years don't even have Isoflex.

When looking at the highest mileage 600s and 800s, I think this tells a story that I can count on without having to spend my time to test the sleds that I work on. I think the question to ask is, what greases are used to pack each of the oem bearings. If I knew all these answers with assurance, then I would say it without question. All that I suggesting is, instead of looking at the shop manuals, look at the grease used in oem beatings.

Another thing is grease compatibility. If there is barium type grease in the bearings, I won't be adding lithium type grease.
 
#7 ·
From then sentence structure I am guessing you meant to say that you were not a grease expert, but occasionally you have had to act as one for work. I too have dug into the Isoflex grease and have found interesting insights from the industrial world. I know of many other greases that have been tried on these sleds, and certain oem bearings on some engines of certain model years don't even have Isoflex.

When looking at the highest mileage 600s and 800s, I think this tells a story that I can count on without having to spend my time to test the sleds that I work on. I think the question to ask is, what greases are used to pack each of the oem bearings. If I knew all these answers with assurance, then I would say it without question. All that I suggesting is, instead of looking at the shop manuals, look at the grease used in oem beatings.

Another thing is grease compatibility. If there is barium type grease in the bearings, I won't be adding lithium type grease.
You are correct on both the fact that I intended to state I am not a grease expert but have been tasked with doing so and more importantly a great point not to mix the basic types. I would also tend to agree with the entire post. I will not edit the original post to fix that first statement. Thanks for pointing that out, it was an honest mistake.
 
#8 ·
This is the isoflex on the pto side of my 600r. Motor had 10500kms on it when I changed it for the first time since new. The grease in the bearing itself which I forgot to take a picture of, looked and felt no different than the grease that came out of the tube I replaced it with.
This alone proved to me why BRP uses isoflex, however it baffles me why it is so expensive.
Image


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#9 ·
I believe that some feel that a bearing is bad or close to the end of it's life when they open the seals and find very little grease. It doesn't take much grease for these bearings to perform as designed. Too much grease can be harmful as the bearing can heat up and wear prematurely.

I'm all for preventative maintenance but sometimes I find myself tossing bearings before they are toast as I'm trying to reduce the likely hood of a trailside failure.
 
#12 ·
My work spent lots of time and money to have an alternate grease found. We buy ISOFLEX by the 3 pound cans. Superior Lubricants test labs came back with a 4 page report that basically said there is no direct replacement for it. So if all the scientists on here feel its better to save $20 than to buy the correct grease, have at it. I will buy the ISOFLEX. Its like people buying cheap 2 stroke oil to save a couple bucks. this is not a sport for the frugal.
 
#18 ·
I read somewhere that Isoflex was developed as a high speed spindle grease for large milling machines.
Krytox has little to no volatiles and is used in vacuum and space applications. I've only seen it used to wet seals since a dry o-ring seal is not reliable.
 
#20 ·
googling iso-flex special a
By the way Isofles special A is NOT what BRP recomends it is Isoflex Tapas NB 52, NOT the same thing the Special A consists of ester oil, mineral oil and lithium soap.
The Tapas 52 consists of synthetic hydrocarbon oil and barium complex soap.

I would NOT use the Special A as a replacement.
 
#24 ·
Reading all this with great interest, I'm relatively new to the isoflex game.

Amazon has a 400g tube for $375 CDN and $84 for a 50g tube.

I'm reasonably frugal but if it costs $84 for the 'correct' grease for one engine treatment, which is only needed once or twice in the engine's lifetime, why even think about it?

That's $5,916 less than a total motor job.

Not even a decision to make here. Isoflex all the way.