741-44-45 "Which Lube Goes With Which Weapon" - PS Magazine AUG 2014

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 1

Small Arms…

which lube goes on which weapon?


Do if They Don’t,
soldiErs I hope they
know? read this!

Dear Editor, CLP and LSA can be used on most weapons as long as the temperature is -10°F
As an armament tech, I correct armorers about using the wrong lubes or higher. When the temperature drops below 10°F, you can use LAW (lubricating
on weapons all the time. I think it would be a great idea for PS to summarize
oil, arctic, weapons). If it’s below -10°F, use only LAW on most weapons.
which lubes can be used on which weapons. That would clear up some of
the confusion. There are exceptions, though. For the M249 machine gun and the M3 recoiless
CW2 Ryan Harmon rifle, use only CLP regardless of the temperature.
Camp Casey, Republic of Korea On the M231 firing port weapon, don’t use CLP. Use only LSA in normal
conditions and LAW in extreme cold.
Editor’s note: That’s a great idea! Here we go: For the MK 19, never use CLP— clp isn’t
strong enough
Small arms lubricants differ in viscosity (how easily they flow), chemical it’s not strong enough. Use GMD for your mk 19.
composition and heat resistance. These characteristics dictate which lubricant (grease, molybdenum disulfide) if use gmd, lsa,
or lsa-t.
to use depending on the weapon and environmental conditions. Your -10 TM is you can get it. If you can’t, use LSA
always the best guide to cleaning and lubing your weapons, but here are some or LSA-T. If the temperature drops
general guidelines on lubricants: below 0°F, it’s OK to use LAW.
RBC (rifle bore cleaner) is not a lubricant. It’s strictly for cleaning out carbon When you’re lubing, remember
and powder from the chamber and bore. Remember, when you’re finished using a light lube means a film barely
RBC, you need to lube your weapon. visible to the eye. A heavy lube means
CLP (cleaner, lubricant, preservative) is usually the best choice for taking care a film thick enough to spread with
of your weapon since it cleans, lubes and preserves in one step. your finger.
LSA (lubricant, semi-fluid, automatic weapons) and LSA-T (lubricant, semi- If you need the NSNs for these lubricants and cleaners, see your -10 TM or
fluid, automatic weapons with Teflon®) are strictly lubricants. So before using Page 23 in PS 671 (Oct 08) at:
them you must first clean your weapons with dry cleaning solvent, MIL-PRF-680 https://www.logsa.army.mil/psmag/archives/PS2008/671/671-23.pdf
Type II. Always de-grease thoroughly when changing lubes. Now that you’ve got the whole lube story, make sure armorers and Soldiers read
the story. Copy this article and hand it out at the next Sergeant’s Time. Post it on
PS 741 44 AUG 14 bulletin
PS 741boards, too. 45 AUG 14

741 44-45.indd 1-2 6/20/14 5:15 PM

You might also like