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Oiling The Air Pack

dabtl

Active member
2,053
7
38
Location
Denton, Texas
Looking in the TM's it appears the deuce air pack needs some lube in the air piston chamber.

The lubrication hole is on the rear plate, a square head plug.

I have struggled to get something on it to loosen it, messed up the plug and pulled the air line off to put tool oil in the cylinder.

Now, that I have undertaken to rebuild three of these large air packs the process gets much simpler as I learn.

Want to make oiling a snap? Go to Sears and get a 5/16 eight point socket. Put it on the ratchet and remove the plug with ease. Add oil. Screw back into place.
 

Bill W

Well-known member
1,985
45
48
Location
Brooks,Ga
I oiled my airpac chamber on my last deuce with a couple of oz's of silicone brake fluid, I was told to use the silicone by a old deucer., he stated the old dot 3 setup required oht but with Dot 5 it was different., Its been 8 years since I first did it and about 5 since I last added it and that deuce is still braking strong, anyone else try/use or heard of this method.

P.S.dabtl did you get my order/ paypal payment for the plate??
 

dabtl

Active member
2,053
7
38
Location
Denton, Texas
It should go out tomorrow. It rained here until we got webbed feet. As I only have a pick up to move it around, I waited until today to pick the last of the lot up from the shop.

I also have found grease in one of the air packs I am rebuilding. Some kind of white grease, I do not think lithium. There may have been many methods tried over the years on these things.
 

Bill W

Well-known member
1,985
45
48
Location
Brooks,Ga
"It should go out tomorrow."

No problem
I just wanted to make sure everything went through, my now bedless deuce is in the barn with the rear axles up in the air,I'm starting repairs aft and working forward so it'll be awhile before I get to the winch:|
 

dabtl

Active member
2,053
7
38
Location
Denton, Texas
I have a law office, not a warehouse. I also have a client in the metal business who has a warehouse and not a law office. I keep my stuff there.:wink: So, when it rains I sit around on the computer waiting to pick stuff up. When it is raining he is working, and when it is sunny, he is working. When it is sunny I pick up.
 

Amer-team

Well-known member
1,707
32
48
Location
Centralia/WA
Help! Was following the advice to lube the airpack and when I pulled the plug out of the back of the airpack, water came out.

Yes I do bleed the air tank every time that I shut it off, but when I got the truck, the air tank had to be half full of water.

Is there a way to get any other water out of there or should I leave it and put what oil in that I can?
 

jimm1009

Well-known member
1,165
71
48
Location
Louisville, KY
I must have a newer style air pack as I do not have any plugs on the rear at all. Only the drilled and tapped center hole for mounting support as the rear.
Is there an alternate method for these styles?
jimm1009
 

Flyingvan911

Well-known member
4,709
158
63
Location
Kansas City, MO
How much airtool oil do you put in the airpack? The white grease in the airpack might be used to lube rubber o-rings. Molycoat is usually used in railroad airbrake valves and it last for years.
 

Amer-team

Well-known member
1,707
32
48
Location
Centralia/WA
I ended up using the compressor to blow out extra moisture.

Then put in between 1 and 1 1/2 ounces of Marvel mystery oil per other threads on this issue. Put everything back together and it seems to still work. Now I know what to do with the airpack and when, so will keep an eye on it.

Thanks all for the help.
 

jimmcld

Member
469
5
18
Location
Denton, Texas
I ended up using the compressor to blow out extra moisture.

Then put in between 1 and 1 1/2 ounces of Marvel mystery oil per other threads on this issue. Put everything back together and it seems to still work. Now I know what to do with the airpack and when, so will keep an eye on it.

Thanks all for the help.

I used Mystery oil on a bunch of pneumatic tools some years ago. It gummed up and ate up all of the o-rings.
 

Amer-team

Well-known member
1,707
32
48
Location
Centralia/WA
Thank you for the tip on the Mystery oil. I will try to keep an eye on it.

It has to work better than the water that was in there. Took it out this morning and it seemed to perform fine in the brake department.
 

FormerNewMVGuy

Active member
1,237
10
38
Location
stockton NJ
Actually, the proper oil to use is OHT C-635 light hydraulic oil, I know for a fact that sprucemt surplus carries it and our own member EMR has a quantity of it also, This is what the TM calls for and it is what i use in all my airpacks
 

jwaller

Active member
3,724
19
38
Location
Columbia, SC
I've put 20k miles on my deuce and air tool oil is working great, not a single brake problem so far. use what you want just make sure it works bc with a single circuit system there is no room for error.
 
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