You know I may have to try this as well. I tried lythium grease and  
this just didn't work in the end. I might have to take this apart to  
see how it works cause so far my glider is making enough noise to wake  
the dead. What sucks is I rarely sit in it and just moving slightly is  
enough to produce all sort of noise.

On Aug 24, 2008, at 1:37 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> goofy maybe,
> but I really silicone spray.
> We did a quick rub down of a friend's car once; and she said it  
> looked a
> whole lot cleaner. I think I spent 10 mins on it.
> I am unsure why you mentioned getting it on the glass; it wipes  
> glass nice
> too. :)
> Thanks for the info on the recliner. I got this one for father's day  
> when
> that was finally applicable to me.
>
> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > OK Spiro, I'll check that out, it sounds like it might be the  
> ticket.
> >
> > I just inherited one of those two-piece recliner sets where the  
> chair is sort of on a glider type mechanism and there's a kind of  
> otamin (sp) with the same mechanism. This was originally in the  
> living room but my wife relegated it to my basement domain.
> >
> > It has a squeak too, and I used WD40 on all the contact points and  
> sprockets or whatever you'd call them, and it's better, but it's not  
> quiet by any means.
> >
> > Bill Stephan
> > Kansas Citty MO
> > Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Phone: (816)803-2469
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Date: Friday, August 22, 2008 3:47 pm
> > Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Storm door lubricatrion was pushbars
> >> Silicone spray generally comes with a straw.
> >> I've gotten that stuff up in the closer pump, and let it run down
> >> over
> >> that full length hinge on our storm door. it got quiet.
> >>
> >> What I can't seem to find is how to get the recliner to stop
> >> squeaking.Maybe Lenny, or another one of the "good husbands" would
> >> know. I was told
> >> not to use the silicone and so I left it squeak. :)
> >>
> >>
> >> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >>
> >>> Spiro's mention of storm doors reminded me that I meant to ask  
> this:
> >>> WE have three storm doors altogether, and two are associated
> >> with a sort of three-seasons room. These two have developped some
> >> really loud squeals when the door is opened or closed. There has
> >> to be a way of getting a lubricant to the hinge, but there don't
> >> seem to be pins that could be extracted. Anybody have experience
> >> with this?
> >>> Thanks.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Bill Stephan
> >>> Kansas Citty MO
> >>> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >>> Phone: (816)803-2469
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> ----- Original Message -----
> >>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >>> Date: Friday, August 22, 2008 12:58 pm
> >>> Subject: [BlindHandyMan] pushbars
> >>>> Hi Folks, I've gotten a few responses on my request for push  
> bars.
> >>>> They
> >>>> were in the manner of "me too".
> >>>> Well, recently a glass and ceramic diamond bit was posted.
> >>>> That company
> >>>> technologylk.com
> >>>> sells loads of things like storm door hardware as well as  
> mirrored
> >>>> glass
> >>>> and glass cutters.
> >>>> They have white powdered aluminum pusbars, set of 3 in aluminum
> >>>> frame part
> >>>> dg40 spanning up to 36 inches
> >>>> and they have vinyl coated, (thin metal) 2 bar kits (maybe in
> >>>> strictly
> >>>> vinyl brackets as I bought at ACE hardware a few years ago)
> >>>> item k5166 is gray and k5167 is white.
> >>>> I really think I want the dg40.
> >>>> I'm going back there as they have parts to fix luver mechanisms  
> as
> >>>> well.Thanks for the post, to the poster, it has had valuable
> >>>> tangential
> >>>> results!
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>
> >
>
> 

Scott Howell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





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