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VW Golf Door locks keep freezing, best lubricant?



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 16th 04, 03:08 AM
Greg
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Default VW Golf Door locks keep freezing, best lubricant?

A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
'96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
and grease because they can attract dirt over time.

Thanks!

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  #2  
Old December 16th 04, 04:09 AM
dave AKA vwdoc1
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I like to spray Dura Lube Advanced All Purpose Lubricant Protector in the
lock and handle areas.
http://shop.duralube.com/cgi-bin/800...t%20Protectant

I live in Chicago and it seems to work fine in the vehicles that I have used
it on. ;-)
Oh and BTW it seems to last too!
One bad thing is that I can't seem to find it anymore in the usual local
places. :-(

JMHO.
later,
dave
(One out of many daves)

"Greg" > wrote in message ...
>A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
> '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
> heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
> recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
> and grease because they can attract dirt over time.
>
> Thanks!
>



  #3  
Old December 16th 04, 06:44 AM
Tom's VR6
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In rec.autos.makers.vw.watercooled, Greg wrote:

>A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
>'96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
>heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
>recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
>and grease because they can attract dirt over time.


I like to squirt in ethylene glycol antifreeze. If you have a
syringe, fine. Otherwise you can use a basketball inflation needle,
a plastic bag, and a rubber band to insert antifreeze. I think it
washes out the water, and makes any residual/new water not freeze.

Wipe off what drips out, of course.

This is a timely thread. Gotta do mine too.



  #4  
Old December 16th 04, 12:14 PM
Joseph Meehan
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Greg wrote:
> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on
> her '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks?
> I've heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody
> also recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular
> oils and grease because they can attract dirt over time.
>
> Thanks!


A long time ago my father, the locksmith, taught me that you don't use
any oil based materials in locks. Locks work best when clean and dry. Oils
just help hold dirt and dry to a sticky mess. The only material he ever
used was graphite and that has always worked for me.

The issue of freezing is not related to lubrication. Cold can thicken
up the oils that may have been used in the locks and cause them to
malfunction, but freezing is water related. In over 40 years of driving cars
in the Ohio snow belt, I have never had one "freeze." Actually I have never
had a car long malfunction in all those years and I have always followed my
father's advice.

I suggest that most people who have freeze problems are really oil based
cold problems and need to clean the locks with a good zero-residue cleaner.
The rest have a special problem likely do to the design of the lock. For
those I would recommend on the the special products designed just for that
and consider a spring cleaning with a zero-residue solvent followed by a
graphite lube.

BTW WD-40 is an oil product with light weight oils that will, in time,
leave the same sticky oil mess in a lock as other oils. It will displace
water, reducing the freezing problem, but it then just adds it's own
problems.

--
Joseph Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math


  #5  
Old December 16th 04, 02:14 PM
Leroy Mowry
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"Greg" > wrote in message ...
> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
> '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
> heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
> recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
> and grease because they can attract dirt over time.


Don't these locks have small flipping doors? Maybe they're not
closed tight? Then put in foam insulator around the locks called
"Great Stuff."




  #6  
Old December 16th 04, 02:48 PM
Tom's VR6
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In rec.autos.makers.vw.watercooled, "Leroy Mowry" > wrote:

>"Greg" > wrote in message ...
>> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
>> '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
>> heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
>> recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
>> and grease because they can attract dirt over time.

>
>Don't these locks have small flipping doors? Maybe they're not
>closed tight? Then put in foam insulator around the locks called
>"Great Stuff."



That's not funny.

  #7  
Old December 16th 04, 03:55 PM
Joseph Meehan
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TeGGer® wrote:
> "Joseph Meehan" > floridly penned in
> :
>
>> Greg wrote:
>>> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on
>>> her '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks?
>>> I've heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite.
>>> Somebody also recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from
>>> using regular oils and grease because they can attract dirt over
>>> time.
>>>
>>> Thanks!

>>
>> A long time ago my father, the locksmith, taught me that you
>> don't use
>> any oil based materials in locks. Locks work best when clean and
>> dry. Oils just help hold dirt and dry to a sticky mess. The only
>> material he ever used was graphite and that has always worked for me.

>
>
>
> Graphite is great if you live in an area without snow. It is death on
> locks if your area does have snow. Not a good idea for an automotive
> lock.


I have used graphite in 7 cars over 40 years. I live in the snow belt
(Ohio) and I have never had a lock freeze up. I did have the front bonnet
freeze shut on my Sunbeam Imp. The gas was under it so I had to chip the
ice away all the way around the bonnet to free it up.

>
> The very best thing I have ever found is spray cans of Rust Check or
> Krown, intended for auto-body rustproofing. This is the "drippy
> stuff".
>
> It's light enough not to interfere with lock operation at -20F, and
> most importantly, it "creeps" and covers the entire inside of the
> lock. The creeping action means it gets to the back of the weather
> flap, keeping the spring from rusting and breaking. It creeps in
> between the plungers and their bores, making them slide more easily.
>
> Spray it in liberally, making sure it backs out of the lock. Wipe off
> excess. Enjoy locks that never, ever freeze, and even last longer due
> to the lubrication.
>
>
>> I suggest that most people who have freeze problems are really
>> oil based
>> cold problems and need to clean the locks with a good zero-residue
>> cleaner. The rest have a special problem likely do to the design of
>> the lock. For those I would recommend on the the special products
>> designed just for that and consider a spring cleaning with a
>> zero-residue solvent followed by a graphite lube.

>
>
>
> Freeze problems are due to water entering the lock and freezing.
> Water can enter for several reasons: Condensation, snow pushed in
> through the weather flap by the key, or a weather flap that is open
> due to a broken spring.
>
> Rust Check or Krown, the very best there is.


--
Joseph Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math


  #8  
Old December 16th 04, 03:57 PM
Joseph Meehan
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Leroy Mowry wrote:
> "Greg" > wrote in message
> ...
>> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on
>> her '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks?
>> I've heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite.
>> Somebody also recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from
>> using regular oils and grease because they can attract dirt over
>> time.

>
> Don't these locks have small flipping doors? Maybe they're not
> closed tight? Then put in foam insulator around the locks called
> "Great Stuff."


Maybe Leroy thought this would be funny, but if someone was to follow
this advice it could turn real un-funny. Don't use any spray insulation.
It will not help and can do damage.

--
Joseph Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math


  #9  
Old December 16th 04, 04:00 PM
Tom's VR6
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In rec.autos.makers.vw.watercooled, TeGGer® wrote:

>
>
>Freeze problems are due to water entering the lock and freezing. Water can
>enter for several reasons: Condensation, snow pushed in through the weather
>flap by the key, or a weather flap that is open due to a broken spring.
>

Also, when you use your key in rain, it is difficult to keep it dry
as you insert it.

>Rust Check or Krown, the very best there is.


Interesting products, but I don't think I would put that into my
locks. I wonder what the corresponding products are called in the
US.

But then the ethylene glycol has been good for me. I tried both the
methyl and isopropyl forms of "Heet", but they did not do it for me.
I think the ethylene glycol residue helps where Heet would
evaporate.


  #10  
Old December 16th 04, 05:02 PM
Daniel J. Stern
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On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Greg wrote:

> A friend is having a lot of trouble with her door locks freezing on her
> '96 VW Golf. What is the best lubricant to use on these locks? I've
> heard good and bad things about silicone and graphite. Somebody also
> recommended lithium grease. I've been warned from using regular oils
> and grease because they can attract dirt over time.


You're getting all kinds of dumb advice (engine antifreeze, insulating
foam, Dura-Lube oil, etc.). The correct fix is indeed spray silicone
lube. The CRC brand ("Heavy Duty Silicone") in the red and white can is a
good kind. The can comes with a straw; push it into the spray head, then
put the other end into the door lock (past the little flap door) and give
a few quick spray bursts, moving the straw to spray up, down, and straight
ahead. Then insert and remove the key several times to distribute the
silicone on the lock's tumblers, and operate the lock in both directions a
few times. Repeat for all body locks (doors, hatchback). Then, open the
doors and hatch and spray the silicone evenly onto the rubber door
weatherstrips so that the doors don't freeze shut. The silicone's carrier
will evaporate, leaving the weatherstrips non-greasy but frostproof.

Then, as long as you've got the can out, you can shoot the gas door
hinges, the latches and hinges for the hood, doors and hatch, the rear
wiper pivot, the sliding/turning dashboard and steering column controls,
the antenna...

DS
 




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