Member Since: 06 Feb 2019
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 882
Caliper sliders - what grease?
Happy Sunday everyone and thanks in advance.
When replacing the rear calipers on my 2005 D3, what slip/grease should you use on the caliper slider pins?
I have a tube of copper grease, which the local motor factor suggested, but i wonder whether there's something better?
Cheers all.2022 BMW i4 M50. Bought Oct 2022. 10,200 miles and counting...
2014 BMW 435d convertible. Bought July 2021. 58,000 miles and counting...
2005 Discovery 3 HSE Auto. Bought Feb 2019. 169,000 miles and counting...
2009 Freelander 2 XS Manual. Bought Sep 2013. SOLD Aug 2021 (already regretted!)
Member Since: 25 Aug 2018
Location: Lincoln
Posts: 373
Ive always used copper grease and never seased while using it. Most important is makig sure the rubbers are good once grease is in.
7th Aug 2022 1:16 pm
DIY Ace
Member Since: 06 Feb 2019
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 882
Thanks, I assumed copper okay but always good to get second opinion.2022 BMW i4 M50. Bought Oct 2022. 10,200 miles and counting...
2014 BMW 435d convertible. Bought July 2021. 58,000 miles and counting...
2005 Discovery 3 HSE Auto. Bought Feb 2019. 169,000 miles and counting...
2009 Freelander 2 XS Manual. Bought Sep 2013. SOLD Aug 2021 (already regretted!)
Member Since: 25 Aug 2018
Location: Lincoln
Posts: 373
Good for 1150 celcius
7th Aug 2022 1:33 pm
Captain Crosscheck
Member Since: 03 Sep 2021
Location: Oslo
Posts: 310
I recently greased all four of mine with some Aeroshell 7. General purpose grease, used for wherever. Not aggressive towards the rubber either.
7th Aug 2022 2:14 pm
eightfoot
Member Since: 12 Apr 2015
Location: sunny essex
Posts: 762
i use wheel bearing grease as i find that copper grease has a tendency to dry out but only use it on the pins that have no rubber on them
for pins with rubber on the ends i use silicone grease as it stops the rubber swelling up and binding the pins in the carriersplease excuse any grammer/punctuation mistakes,i'm thick,thankyou
current vehicles 2005 d3 2013 d4
7th Aug 2022 2:14 pm
aja4x4
Member Since: 14 Apr 2019
Location: Westbury
Posts: 2459
Red rubber grease is the best for this job other grease such as copper slip can react with the rubber causing it to swell and degrade.Andrew
D3 2.7tdv6 2005
D4 3.0 SDV6 Commercial died and gone to LR heaven
D5 3.0 SDV6 HSE
7th Aug 2022 2:18 pm
Disco_Mikey
Member Since: 29 May 2007
Location: Dundee, Scotland
Posts: 20732
^^^
We dont use any copper grease in the workshop now. We go between ceramic, rubber and LM greases My D3 Build Thread
Member Since: 04 Feb 2017
Location: Falkirk
Posts: 348
I thought that copper grease dries out over time causing drag on the sliders? Hence uneven pad wear. I use rubber grease.Series one 1949 - in bits, chassis is strapped to the ceiling in my garage (beside the canoe)
LR 90 - In bits
Disco 3 - currently in bits
7th Aug 2022 2:32 pm
Pete K
Member Since: 15 Jan 2016
Location: GL
Posts: 10367
Exactly.
7th Aug 2022 3:19 pm
Harry365
Member Since: 25 Aug 2018
Location: Lincoln
Posts: 373
I've never had issues with rubbers degrading or grease drying but I'll definitely take the advise and make the switch over here.
7th Aug 2022 3:25 pm
lynalldiscovery
Member Since: 22 Dec 2009
Location: Maidstone
Posts: 7274
Any old grease, but defo not copper grease.
Large customer lots of vans, lots of caliper issues which was traced to the van mechs using copper grease on the sliders, stopped using copper grease and the issues went away.
At work we are no longer allowed to use copper grease on the wheel or hub fixings, we have been told it has been shown to cause corrosion!
7th Aug 2022 3:44 pm
munst
Member Since: 16 Sep 2020
Location: GLOS
Posts: 155
Remember a guy on another landy site a few years ago started posting 'how to' videos and caused a stir with some of them. I couldn't decide if they were satire or not, in his caliper rebuild video he used lashings of Copper slip as assembly grease on the pistons.
Anti sieze and lubricant are not the same. Copper slip has a large amount of Copper suspended in the grease which turns into a kind of grinding paste when repeatedly moved. It will wear running surfaces out quickly. Red rubber grease is the best stuff for caliper sliders.
7th Aug 2022 4:00 pm
Flatlander
Member Since: 20 Jul 2015
Location: Here
Posts: 575
Clear silicone grease is the stuff the OEM's use.
Agree about copperslip being misused, we only use it on the wheel hubs, it's very rare to lubricate anything to do with the brakes - most now come with shims plated with a hard metal to allow the pads to slide without attracting the brake dust like grease does.
I've seen some brake pads with adhesive backing that some clown has lathered in copperslip, that's a special kind of stupid, that is.
Consider how much grease is on the brakes of new vehicles - none. There's no reason to deviate from that with modern (i.e. this century) materials.
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