AO: We are back from the dead... again! After an 18 day outage, we are finally alive and well. Who knew how complicated updating software/databases from 2008 would be. I still have alot of tweaks to make, but my main goal was getting everything patched and updated to 2026.
Vbulletin 6 has changed alot since 2008 so we will have a ton of new features to dig into.
i think they are all neoprene, if the tool is dangerous/ expensive/ will get you in trouble if it breaks dont try to swap orings, you have at least 3 different things about orings (sizes, hardness, chemical absorption) that if they are even slightly off will either not work or just let them fail in the wrong situations.
I'm not using mag o-rings in the air tools, rather I want to use the air tool oil in my mag but want to make sure it doesn't affect the o-rings in the mag....
it shouldnt do anything to bad but its rather hard to get the right one... given my friend fixed an aka 2 liter reg with a random plumbing oring some how but that was such chance
Most good quality synthetic air tool oil is completely safe for your mag. The yellowish-white mag orings are urethane. The white ones are teflon (classic on-off top oring). The black ones are buna-N.
The yellow to (bad) brown translucent are urethane. The little white opaque are teflon. The black are buna-N (just the level 10 carrier I think). Most are 70 or 90 durometer.
At varying rates, non-synthetic lubes eventually harden and weaken the urethane and just weaken the buna-N. Think storage time, not playing time. Since you have a combination and are more concerned about storage than actual lube performance, the synthetic lube keeps them all happy.
Using synthetic grease on each oring will buy you a few years of good oring life in storage, but they all turn on you eventually. The more pressure, twisting and pulling they are exposed to the faster they go.
Most good quality synthetic air tool oil is completely safe for your mag. The yellowish-white mag orings are urethane. The white ones are teflon (classic on-off top oring). The black ones are buna-N.
I think this is your Kleen Flo, which is petroleum based.
The compressor oil would be harmless to try. The only problem with synthetics, especially gear box and crank case lubes, is that they often don't adhere to the surfaces well. They don't need to when they are constantly circulated. As long as your oil doesn't get blown out before you can re-lube and you have plenty available, that amsoil looks pretty nice.
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