Thank you for this! I have always wondered what I was doing wrong when air was trapped inside rendering the gun useless. Really appreciate your videos on everyday homeowner problems.
Yes i have tried to put the tube in backward also the adjustment at the end of the hose for the fitting will make it easier to slide on and off the fitting
Thank You!!!! Have an old grease gun and never saw my late husband change one out. ( l learned a lot from watching him and holding tools!) I had put mine in backwards and spent over an hour trying to get the spring pushed in! LOL Finally came up from the barn and found your video! Now my brush hog zerks are all greased and the wheel turns as it should! Ya made an old lady's day!
Thanks Dad! At last an explanation to the mystery of the mighty grease gun has been answered! You are awesome (and I did not have a Dad growing up in the '60s) - so I missed this lesson. Well done!
Thanks for the video. I have use the grease guns for years but for about twenty five years i never touch them. So watching your video refreshed my memory. Appreciated it, Thank you.
My supervisor would never buy the prefilled cartridges, we had to bulk fill grease from a 5 gallon tub of grease. Same method as your video, which was excellent, except for the mess. That's something I don't miss in retirement!!!
Meanwhile the time & mess involved with manually filling the cartridges probably negated the "big savings" over buying a case or two of the cartridges all at one time. If you were using THAT much at work, the boss should have invested in the economical 55 gallon drum size of grease and grease system like the quick lube places use.
One of the rare detailed and helpful tutorials about standard grease guns, thanks a lot. Most people posting grease gun videos have no clue about air being trapped in the tube and they never mention loosening the tube about quarter or half turn to let air out before pushing rod back in. Also, most people posting negative reviews about grease guns don't know how to load and use it properly and blame malfunction on manufacturers.
Meh, many people post negative reviews because the gun is merely low quality junk with poor tolerances. Sometimes the cheapest thing on Amazon is false economy. As far as not knowing how to load one properly are you kidding? There's really only one way you can get it together and have it work, is not so much unlike using a caulking gun. It's fairly obvious the open end has to go in first, fairly obvious the plunger has to be pulled back, fairly obvious it has to be released, so all that usually remains is pumping a few times to evacuate the grease quantity in the tube to get TO the air to get it out too.
@@stinkycheese804 You would think, but a lot of people really don't do what they are supposed to do. I haven't used my grease gun in years and sort of forgot the method. Yep, believe it or not I needed a quick review. The bleeding the air part is something I never knew. I would just pump until the air came out and I saw fresh grease. Learn something new all the time. I only use my grease gun for my boat trailer. Haven't used it in a few years and just finished packing the bearings. Need to replace the grease.
@Bee Bob, I agree. That's what makes videos like these worth doing. Everybody needs a review now and again...especially on items we don't do daily. I have many channels I subscribe to for things just as that.....tasks I do, but maybe only once in a while. I'm glad to have a resource that can give me a quick review and save me some time and money. Thanks for your support!
Well the manufacturer is STILL at fault. If the manufacturer was SMART they'd INCLUDE A VIDEO TUTORIAL to avoid returns and money lost. Everyone dogging the consumer is speaking IN HINDSIGHT. They too at one point had NO CLUE how to operate one. But lack self awareness to understand this.
I will have to follow this next time, I hate to change my grease gun because I make a big mess and have a difficult time to make it even work, sometimes I get lucky. I can see things I have been doing incorrectly now, thanks again.
Couple of add ons here from a guy who consistently makes a total mess of this every time: 1. Be very very careful with locking off of the spring loaded rod: it usually will release right when you are trying to screw on the pump top, spewing grease everywhere. 2. older equipment zerks will have dried out grease if under maintained. You may need remove the fitting, clean it out, flush it with fresh grease. Some brief heat helps too. Also if it’s dried out in the zerk, it’s probably dried out on the pin and bearing surfaces. So you may need to pull the pin, clean both the sleeve and pin surfaces and re-grease. 3. If you have your grandfather’s grease gun it may be so old it cannot use a cardboard grease tube and has to be manually filled with grease. Good video!
It's been a while since I used my old grease gun, but I need to use it this week and I had forgotten the fine points of putting in a new cartridge. I probably would have started by trying to unscrew the wrong end, with predictable, if not disastrous, results. I appreciate the clear, easy-to-see demonstration and the tips on how to deal with air bubbles and leaks, and the reminder on being careful to not lose the rubber seal. The most essential basic tips for everyone are (1) wear rubber/nitrile gloves and (2) do the job over a trash can with a liner, preferably outdoors. Thanks again for this well thought out and very useful video.
Have watched several videos on this and yours is the best by a mile. I am new at this and have never loaded a grease gun so I went to TH-cam and with your video I am now confident that I accomplish the task.
Hello Dennis. Thank you ever so much for showing me how to load a grease tube. I've had two of them for years and have never known how to properly handle the installation properly. Even the guy at Tractor Supply was of little help.And now your TH-cam is invaluable to me and everybody who comes across it because this is a thorough "how to" video on exactly the proper way to load a grease gun. I'm gonna go back to Tractor Supply for a new tube and finally be proud of my grease gun, cocked and loaded and finally my zerk fittings get what they deserve. THUMBS UP!!!
Thanks so much for this. I've been doing it wrong for years. Had to load a grease gun yesterday and I had it all over the place. Next time it should be a breeze!
OMG!!! Shoulda watched this before I struggled with my grease gun. I actually pulled out the rod/spring assembly entirely, loaded the grease cylinder, tightened the top/pump end and then MIGHTILY FOUGHT AND STRUGGLED with jamming the plunger/spring assembly back in and fought to get it threaded while the spring tried to push out the side. Grease all over the place, Smeared up many gloves as I tried to get a grip and turn it while the spring pushed back so hard. Thanks for this clear explanation. Next time... LOL!
Hey thanks. This helped a whole bunch. I haven’t had the need to reload my gun for over 20 years. The cartilage was stuck in the tube but this vid help me get it taken care of. Thanks again.
Thank you for straight forward easy to understand proceedure. Grease guns have been my bane at the end of maintaining my boat trailer. One hour to change the hubs, several hours to get the grease gun to work to grease the suspension grease points. Thanks again
Thank you for watching, Edwin! Yes, these grease guns are useful tools for sure, but only a few of us change the cartridge often enough to remember how to do it without a mess....haha. I'm glad this helped!
You can't imagine how excited I am in finding this video. I have one of those grease guns from back in the early - mid 60's and never knew how to fill it. I didn't even know it took a tube of grease. I thought you spooned it in my hand ... I won't go into how that has worked out LOL. Now I need to clean it up and see if I can resurrect it.
Thanks again every time I need change I watch this as A refresher cause I all ways forget which way goes and few other little things like bleeding it...I don t change in very often..
Very well explained! Thank you! Most guys don't say WHY they are twisting the plunger (my unit doesn't have that style of "catch" so it made no sense to me), or how it's different if you have the valve on top
Thank you Dennis for this video. this worked perfect to change the grease cartridge in my small gun. The tip for the air release and to DO it over a garbage can are spot on. now im off to clean the grease blob off my driveway! I wish i would have clicked on this video first would have saved me the hassle!
I think to myself “who needs a video to load a grease gun?” I watch any ways. I find out that the rod goes in after your done. For 30 yrs, I’ve been leaving it extended and having it be in my way until the grease was depleted . 🤦🏻♂️. Nice video.
God Bless ya Sir,...you have no idea how many times I got grease everywhere and could never figure this out. Thank you so much, I subscribed and saved this video to watch again soon, when I hff ave to replace my grease.
Thank you!! After multiple other videos, including the manufacturer, I was able to get a new grease gun working. I have subscribed to your channel too. I like your no nonsense approach to instruction. Thanks again!
Very good video, Mr. Coffey. Most people who use grease guns would probably think "DUH" if they took the time to watch this video, however, "THEY SHOULD NOT"!!! I've used grease guns for decades, but on far too many occasions, I've tried using a gun another person had refilled/used (tried using) before me & I had to take it apart, clean it out & replace the tube because ??? & of course, I wound up wearing quite a bit of grease. You wouldn't think putting that cartridge in upside down (backwards) & venting it would matter much, but if that previous user wasn't mechanically incline & was incredibly impatient, you can have a real mess on/in/all over your hands & most things near you. THANK YOU, SIR!!!
A very good informative video for those who don't know the proper way to load a grease gun. I have seen a lot of folks, even here on youtube that say, Oh don't need no help... how hard can it be. Then I cringe watching them struggle with a confused look on there face trying to put the quick pull tab end in first... just not goona happen! Great vid and more should watch this demo! 🛠️👍
Thanks for unveiling the mystery of reloading this common mechanic's tool. My grease gun is currently lying out on the driveway from futile attempts at properly reloading the darn thing. Guess I'll give it another try now.
@@dwcoffey Before Pulling the rod, on your greese gun loosen the tube about 2 turns to keep it from pulling a vacuum in the tube as the plunger is withdrawn, there should be a small hole that is exposed to let air in or out for this purpose, by loosening the tube.
Just found you today when I needed refresher on my grease gun. Thanks for the clear step by step video. Problem I’m having is not enough hand strength anymore to pull the plunger & spring back far enough to lock it. Any suggestions?
Thanks for watching, Robin! If you have access to some lumber and tools, maybe take a short piece of 2x4 or 1x4 and cut a slot in it for the plunger shaft. Slip the plunger thru the slot, with the plunger handle underneath the board. Bend your knees, stand on the board, one foot each side or the plunger and pull the grease gun body upward you while you straighten your legs. Not sure if that will work, but legs are stronger than arms.
Great idea! Thank you, I will try that next time. I took it to my mechanic & he got it fixed. The bottom third of the cardboard grease cylinder had gotten squished into the spring. He had trouble even with putting it in a vise. @dwcoffey
Nice presentation. Also great info re: when you have air in the gun and how to get rid of it. Seems I always get a little of it no matter what. Thanks for sharing..
Dennis. I truly appreciate your programs on husqvarnas. I have a zero turn and ? all of a sudden I can't remember. It could be LTG 2645. At any rate, you've been very informative.
I've had this same kind of Grease gun since I was a kid...It was my dad's and I've always hated when I had to fill it...I'd get it to work but I'd have grease all over....Thanks for the Video Dennis....BTW I got my Husky Lawnmower Straighten out today thanks to you !!!!
Thanks to you Dennis, after 30 years of filling my grease gun by removing it from the tube and pushing it in with a putty knife (embarrassed) it will be a pleasure to do it the right way, i can't wait to try it. Thanks.
Thanks for watching, Tom! I'm glad this helped....yes, you'll find this a lot quicker and a lot less messy! LOL! Trust me, I've worn my fair share of grease! haha
Thank you for a simple demonstration. It was a Great help to a widow trying to do some more simple maintenance of my older riding mowers. I had no idea how the grease hun worked.
I'm so glad this helped and thank you for watching! I have several videos covering different topics on riding mowers, specifically Husqvarna riders, maybe those will be of some help too. Thanks again!
Thanks Mr C!!! As elementary as this is I couldn’t figure out why mine kept leaking. Turns out my pump was missing the seal at the top when I bought it! 😂 thanks again!
Thanks for explaining how to reload my grease gun. It's been a while since I had to change a grease cartridge and your video helped a lot. I appreciate your help.
Hey Dennis, I used a grease gun for years and through trial and error I found a way to quickly reload a grease gun that is similar to what you do but I never had air in the grease pump or lost prime on the grease pump. When you pull the plunger back without unscrewing the tube from the gun, you can suck grease out of the grease pump thereby losing the prime. Like you, I work over an open trash can with a couple of rags placed in easy reach. Now, assuming the grease gun is empty, grab the pull handle on the bottom and check the plunger is at the top of the tube, confirming the grease gun is empty. Leave the pull handle alone now and unscrew the top of the grease gun like you did and set it aside. Now manipulate the pull handle to push the empty cartridge out of the gun. Pull the handle out now and lock it. Insert the new tube like you did. Now screw the tube onto the grease pump but only a turn or so. Release the pull handle and slowly turn the tube fully into the grease gun. My grease guns, and I assume most grease guns have a small vent opening on the side of the grease pump top that allows air and grease to discharge. When the tube is fully screwed into the gun, the vent is sealed. Now the gun will continue pumping without any air problems.
@@dwcoffey Meanwhile ... one year later ... time to reload the grease gun and ... had to watch it again! We'll see if I can remember next year, LoL. "... ok, what did Dennis say? Was it cardboard end first, or ... dang, I'll have to go back and watch him again!"
I'm not trying to be disagreeable but I always unscrew the pump end of the tube off first because if you pull the plunger back first it will suck the grease out of the pump. If you unscrew the pump off the end of the tube and lay it aside then put your cartridge in when you screw it back onto the pump leave it loose at first until you push the plunger back in to help expel any air that's in the end of the cartridge and then you won't have to reprime the pump... Just my two cents from my own experiences.
NMX 777 You would be correct that’s what happened to me the other day I had to unscrew that screw to let the air out and yes I had a little mess on my hands oh my gosh
Thanks for watching, Robert! I have found that some grease is worse about separating than others and causing drips. I use Lucas and Valvoline grease and don't have that issue with them. But, in the past when I've had other grease do that, I slip a gallon ziploc bag over the grease gun. I sure appreciate you supporting my channel!
Good video, thanks. I'm starting to do more of the maintenance on my truck and my camper. So this was helpful. I had not used one in a while. Looks like your gun is from tractor supply, it's the same as mine but I got the pistol grip version.
thats great I ben fighting with them for years!! Now I rewatch this every time I load gun..Only use it once year now for boat and trailer always forget..
great info. I bought a coffee roaster and was told to buy gun and grease. Ordered it, came..had zero clue lol. Luckily my buddy how is a race mechanic popped over lol
Been years since Astro Van was lubed, 7 different fittings. Novice excluding air in 1 of your sequenced steps; thank you ( and towvan ready Sobo if I can locate companion ).
Thanks you.......you gave me a Hint for what I needed too know, it has Air inside....that the reason it's not pumping the Grease out.....I thought it was broken , you saved me some money.
Thanks Dennis very well done- the little inportant things you covered[rubber seal being stuck]realy helped me out! looks like the other guys had rubber seal problems. I had watched another video that didn't have the rubber seal tip .Glad I found your video
Now I know why my grease gun leaks like a sieve. I must have thrown the seal ring away without realizing it. Great instructions. I think I have managed to insert the grease tube bass-ackwards.
Thank you for showing all the facts, I bought several vintage types and none had any tubes in them they were all clean, I filled one with greese never new you place a tube in them lol,I do now,
I've never used a tube in mine ,just put it in a pot of grease, suck it up ,bingo ,bought a new 1 tube filled gd ,went to put a tube in my old gun ,won't fit too small
I have found that if you loosen pump on grease gun and if you have a front tractor tire just bump the pump end on top of tire the bounce will make the grease fill the void and get rid of air. Be careful and don't loosen pump too much (maby 1/2 turn)
Thanks for watching, John! I've never tried that, but does it just displace the air, and cause you to eventually hit the air pocket when you get to the bottom of the tube?
Yep, agree. If you can't seem to get the air out it is likely the rubber plunger is wedged on the cardboard tube and shocking it slips it into position in the tube. Hitting on a tire keeps from denting the grease gun tube. If it is still being stubborn, I hold the grease gun upright and hit/shock the bottom on a hard surface; not so hard though to mangle your plunger.
I agree, Jon! I've fussed and cussed when I did it wrong. Hopefully this helps folks get a quick reminder. It's not so bad when done right. Thanks for watching!
Great video, trapped air in the gun has driven me crazy forever. There must be some variance in the zerk fittings as on occasion getting the “chuck” to release is a PITA. In cold weather taking the new tube indoors to warm up first is helpful.
Thanks for watching, Andy! Yes, I have found that some fittings are perfect, some are a touch too small and some are a touch too big. The small ones let the coupler fall off, the big ones make it really difficult to get the coupler on and off. Not sure why, but I guess it is like so many things.....some are just made cheaply and it shows. I have replaced difficult zerks on other equipment and eliminated most of my problems.
Dennis Coffey I bought some angled zerks at NAPA some time ago & was told that they have them in varying sizes. I guessed & I think that what I got was too big. ( seems that sizing would be for the threaded part, I’m not so sure).
Yes, they come in different diameters and threads (SAE and metric). 1/8" diameter are the most common on consumer items. If the threaded part is tapered, it is a thread-cutting fitting...if it is straight, it's made to go in a previously-threaded hole. And of course, you can buy them straight, 45-degree, 90-degree.
Thank you for this! I have always wondered what I was doing wrong when air was trapped inside rendering the gun useless. Really appreciate your videos on everyday homeowner problems.
Thanks again for watching!! I appreciate it and I'm glad this helped!
Yes i have tried to put the tube in backward also the adjustment at the end of the hose for the fitting will make it easier to slide on and off the fitting
Thank You!!!! Have an old grease gun and never saw my late husband change one out. ( l learned a lot from watching him and holding tools!)
I had put mine in backwards and spent over an hour trying to get the spring pushed in! LOL Finally came up from the barn and found your video! Now my brush hog zerks are all greased and the wheel turns as it should! Ya made an old lady's day!
That's fantastic, Carol! Thank you for watching!
ショートムービーで見たい話だな😊
Thanks Dad! At last an explanation to the mystery of the mighty grease gun has been answered! You are awesome (and I did not have a Dad growing up in the '60s) - so I missed this lesson. Well done!
Thank you for watching, Kevin and I'm so glad this was helpful!!
Grease guns have vexed me over the years and contributed to my learning to swear in a number of languages.
Thanks for this!
I know the feeling! haha. Thanks for watching, Keith!
The rubber ring came out with the old cartridge so glad you showed where it goes. Thanks!
Those gaskets are bad about sticking to the tube. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the video. I have use the grease guns for years but for about twenty five years i never touch them. So watching your video refreshed my memory. Appreciated it, Thank you.
I'm glad this helped...we all need a refresher every now and then. Thanks for watching, Jim!
Am an old retired mechanic but I still learned and appreciated your video!
Thank you Larry! I appreciate you watching!
@@dwcoffey pppppppp
P
Thanks, You included removing the old grease cartridge. My days of being covered in grease are over
Thank you for watching, Jack!
My supervisor would never buy the prefilled cartridges, we had to bulk fill grease from a 5 gallon tub of grease. Same method as your video, which was excellent, except for the mess. That's something I don't miss in retirement!!!
Thank you for watching, Gary! Yes, filling these from bulk buckets is the worst.
Meanwhile the time & mess involved with manually filling the cartridges probably negated the "big savings" over buying a case or two of the cartridges all at one time. If you were using THAT much at work, the boss should have invested in the economical 55 gallon drum size of grease and grease system like the quick lube places use.
One of the rare detailed and helpful tutorials about standard grease guns, thanks a lot. Most people posting grease gun videos have no clue about air being trapped in the tube and they never mention loosening the tube about quarter or half turn to let air out before pushing rod back in. Also, most people posting negative reviews about grease guns don't know how to load and use it properly and blame malfunction on manufacturers.
I agree completely! Thank you so much for watching and for the nice comment!
Meh, many people post negative reviews because the gun is merely low quality junk with poor tolerances. Sometimes the cheapest thing on Amazon is false economy. As far as not knowing how to load one properly are you kidding? There's really only one way you can get it together and have it work, is not so much unlike using a caulking gun. It's fairly obvious the open end has to go in first, fairly obvious the plunger has to be pulled back, fairly obvious it has to be released, so all that usually remains is pumping a few times to evacuate the grease quantity in the tube to get TO the air to get it out too.
@@stinkycheese804 You would think, but a lot of people really don't do what they are supposed to do. I haven't used my grease gun in years and sort of forgot the method. Yep, believe it or not I needed a quick review. The bleeding the air part is something I never knew. I would just pump until the air came out and I saw fresh grease. Learn something new all the time. I only use my grease gun for my boat trailer. Haven't used it in a few years and just finished packing the bearings. Need to replace the grease.
@Bee Bob, I agree. That's what makes videos like these worth doing. Everybody needs a review now and again...especially on items we don't do daily. I have many channels I subscribe to for things just as that.....tasks I do, but maybe only once in a while. I'm glad to have a resource that can give me a quick review and save me some time and money. Thanks for your support!
Well the manufacturer is STILL at fault. If the manufacturer was SMART they'd INCLUDE A VIDEO TUTORIAL to avoid returns and money lost. Everyone dogging the consumer is speaking IN HINDSIGHT. They too at one point had NO CLUE how to operate one. But lack self awareness to understand this.
I needed a father like you. I’ve learned a lot from your videos. Thank you!
Thank you so much! I appreciate you watching and I'm glad the vids help!!
This hit me hard…
I will have to follow this next time, I hate to change my grease gun because I make a big mess and have a difficult time to make it even work, sometimes I get lucky. I can see things I have been doing incorrectly now, thanks again.
Thank you very much for watching! I'm also a ham, WA4YYQ.
@@dwcoffey That is great to hear, maybe hear you on the bands sometime!
For a techno-dumb like me with no one to help that was the best COFFEY I had this morning! Thank you.
LOL! Thanks so much for watching!
Couple of add ons here from a guy who consistently makes a total mess of this every time: 1. Be very very careful with locking off of the spring loaded rod: it usually will release right when you are trying to screw on the pump top, spewing grease everywhere. 2. older equipment zerks will have dried out grease if under maintained. You may need remove the fitting, clean it out, flush it with fresh grease. Some brief heat helps too. Also if it’s dried out in the zerk, it’s probably dried out on the pin and bearing surfaces. So you may need to pull the pin, clean both the sleeve and pin surfaces and re-grease. 3. If you have your grandfather’s grease gun it may be so old it cannot use a cardboard grease tube and has to be manually filled with grease. Good video!
All good points! Nothing worse than either shooting grease everywhere or shooting the tube across the shop! haha Thank you for watching, George!
Good to know thank s George
It's been a while since I used my old grease gun, but I need to use it this week and I had forgotten the fine points of putting in a new cartridge. I probably would have started by trying to unscrew the wrong end, with predictable, if not disastrous, results. I appreciate the clear, easy-to-see demonstration and the tips on how to deal with air bubbles and leaks, and the reminder on being careful to not lose the rubber seal. The most essential basic tips for everyone are (1) wear rubber/nitrile gloves and (2) do the job over a trash can with a liner, preferably outdoors.
Thanks again for this well thought out and very useful video.
Thank you so much for watching and for the nice comment! I totally agree with your points!
Have watched several videos on this and yours is the best by a mile. I am new at this and have never loaded a grease gun so I went to TH-cam and with your video I am now confident that I accomplish the task.
I'm glad this helped! Thanks for watching, Erwin!
Thank you for making this video . I haven’t messed with my grease gun in years and your video helped me do it in minutes !
I'm glad it helped, thanks for watching!
Hello Dennis. Thank you ever so much for showing me how to load a grease tube. I've had two of them for years and have never known how to properly handle the installation properly. Even the guy at Tractor Supply was of little help.And now your TH-cam is invaluable to me and everybody who comes across it because this is a thorough "how to" video on exactly the proper way to load a grease gun. I'm gonna go back to Tractor Supply for a new tube and finally be proud of my grease gun, cocked and loaded and finally my zerk fittings get what they deserve. THUMBS UP!!!
Thank you for watching! I appreciate the kind comment and I'm glad it helped!
That was a great explanation on getting the air out so the gun will pump grease out instead of pumping nothing! Good job buddy!
Thanks for watching, James!
I bring your video up everytime I need to change tubes! I just don't use that much. So each time I am relearning it. Thank you!
I'm glad this helps! Thanks for watching!
Thank you very much. I followed your instructions and it worked brilliantly. I never ended up with half of the grease tube on the floor like normal.🙂👍
Fantastic! I'm glad this helped and I appreciate you watching, Michael!
Thanks so much for this. I've been doing it wrong for years. Had to load a grease gun yesterday and I had it all over the place. Next time it should be a breeze!
I had the same problem, that's what prompted me to make this video...LOL! Thanks for watching, Gary!
I've always struggled with this, I won't be struggling anymore, thanks much, I learned something.
I'm glad this helped! Thanks for watching, Christine!
OMG!!! Shoulda watched this before I struggled with my grease gun. I actually pulled out the rod/spring assembly entirely, loaded the grease cylinder, tightened the top/pump end and then MIGHTILY FOUGHT AND STRUGGLED with jamming the plunger/spring assembly back in and fought to get it threaded while the spring tried to push out the side. Grease all over the place, Smeared up many gloves as I tried to get a grip and turn it while the spring pushed back so hard. Thanks for this clear explanation. Next time... LOL!
LOL! I think i had a similar experience that led me to make this video! haha. Thanks for watching, Michael!
Excellent video. thanks -- it's been years since I loaded mine that is now missing.. just bought another
Thank you for watching!
Hi Dennis. Thanks for this tutorial. It’s saved on my phone and I refer to it every time I reload my grease gun. Cheers! Joe in Australia
Thank you for watching, Joe! I'm glad this comes in handy!
Yay! I managed with soooo much less mess. Thank you. I've watched several of your very helpful Husqvarna videos, too.
Great job!! Thanks for watching my vids!
Hey thanks. This helped a whole bunch. I haven’t had the need to reload my gun for over 20 years. The cartilage was stuck in the tube but this vid help me get it taken care of. Thanks again.
I'm glad this helped! Thank you for watching, Doug!
Thank you for straight forward easy to understand proceedure. Grease guns have been my bane at the end of maintaining my boat trailer. One hour to change the hubs, several hours to get the grease gun to work to grease the suspension grease points. Thanks again
Thank you for watching, Edwin! Yes, these grease guns are useful tools for sure, but only a few of us change the cartridge often enough to remember how to do it without a mess....haha. I'm glad this helped!
Thanks. As many times as I've done it, it still feels like the first time. That tension spring always gets me.
Me too!....That's exactly what made me do this video...haha. Thanks for watching Raul!
You can't imagine how excited I am in finding this video. I have one of those grease guns from back in the early - mid 60's and never knew how to fill it. I didn't even know it took a tube of grease. I thought you spooned it in my hand ... I won't go into how that has worked out LOL. Now I need to clean it up and see if I can resurrect it.
Sounds like a great project! Thanks for watching!
Thanks again every time I need change I watch this as A refresher cause I all ways forget which way goes and few other little things like bleeding it...I don t change in very often..
Thanks for watching, Todd!
Very well explained! Thank you! Most guys don't say WHY they are twisting the plunger (my unit doesn't have that style of "catch" so it made no sense to me), or how it's different if you have the valve on top
Thank you for watching, Hazel! I 'm glad it helped!
That pointer about the seal made watching the video well worth the time. I never would have thought to check for it. Thank you!!!!
Thank you very much for watching!
Thank you Dennis for this video. this worked perfect to change the grease cartridge in my small gun. The tip for the air release and to DO it over a garbage can are spot on. now im off to clean the grease blob off my driveway! I wish i would have clicked on this video first would have saved me the hassle!
Great point! Thanks for watching, Ariel!
Thanks I can’t tell you how frustrating this process is without instruction. Good deal
Thank you for watching, Charles!
I think to myself “who needs a video to load a grease gun?” I watch any ways. I find out that the rod goes in after your done. For 30 yrs, I’ve been leaving it extended and having it be in my way until the grease was depleted . 🤦🏻♂️. Nice video.
I'm glad this helped! Thanks so much for watching, Toby!
God Bless ya Sir,...you have no idea how many times I got grease everywhere and could never figure this out. Thank you so much, I subscribed and saved this video to watch again soon, when I hff ave to replace my grease.
Thank you for watching, Bill! I'm glad this helped!
Thank you!! After multiple other videos, including the manufacturer, I was able to get a new grease gun working. I have subscribed to your channel too. I like your no nonsense approach to instruction. Thanks again!
Thank you for watching, John and thanks for subscribing!
Thanks . Found my fathers . He said he never refilled it in 50 years and it’s about to get refilled today for u joints and drive shaft
That will be a nice grease gun, I suspect! Thanks for watching!
Very good video, Mr. Coffey. Most people who use grease guns would probably think "DUH" if they took the time to watch this video, however, "THEY SHOULD NOT"!!! I've used grease guns for decades, but on far too many occasions, I've tried using a gun another person had refilled/used (tried using) before me & I had to take it apart, clean it out & replace the tube because ??? & of course, I wound up wearing quite a bit of grease. You wouldn't think putting that cartridge in upside down (backwards) & venting it would matter much, but if that previous user wasn't mechanically incline & was incredibly impatient, you can have a real mess on/in/all over your hands & most things near you. THANK YOU, SIR!!!
I totally agree Sonny! Thank you for your kind comment and for your support!
Hot dam! Well done sir. Been using grease guns for 50 years. Sometimes they work well, sometimes not.
LOL! Yes sir, that is the truth! Thanks for watching, Carl!
A very good informative video for those who don't know the proper way to load a grease gun. I have seen a lot of folks, even here on youtube that say, Oh don't need no help... how hard can it be. Then I cringe watching them struggle with a confused look on there face trying to put the quick pull tab end in first... just not goona happen!
Great vid and more should watch this demo! 🛠️👍
Thank you so much, Don! I appreciate you watching!
Thanks for unveiling the mystery of reloading this common mechanic's tool. My grease gun is currently lying out on the driveway from futile attempts at properly reloading the darn thing. Guess I'll give it another try now.
Thanks for watching! I have to admit, I've sent more than one tool flying in the past. LOL!
@@dwcoffey If only you understood what your doing wrong.
I'm always about learning, please enlighten me.
@@dwcoffey Before Pulling the rod, on your greese gun loosen the tube about 2 turns to keep it from pulling a vacuum in the tube as the plunger is withdrawn, there should be a small hole that is exposed to let air in or out for this purpose, by loosening the tube.
Thank you Sir. I thought my greaser was broken but it was just air!!! God bless
Glad the video helped! Thanks for watching and may God bless you too!
Just found you today when I needed refresher on my grease gun. Thanks for the clear step by step video. Problem I’m having is not enough hand strength anymore to pull the plunger & spring back far enough to lock it. Any suggestions?
Thanks for watching, Robin! If you have access to some lumber and tools, maybe take a short piece of 2x4 or 1x4 and cut a slot in it for the plunger shaft. Slip the plunger thru the slot, with the plunger handle underneath the board. Bend your knees, stand on the board, one foot each side or the plunger and pull the grease gun body upward you while you straighten your legs. Not sure if that will work, but legs are stronger than arms.
Great idea! Thank you, I will try that next time. I took it to my mechanic & he got it fixed. The bottom third of the cardboard grease cylinder had gotten squished into the spring. He had trouble even with putting it in a vise. @dwcoffey
My grease gun is just like yours. Bought it when i was 17, 65 now. still use it.
Thanks for watching, Frederick! Mine is nearly that old.
THANKS! I no longer have to wear grease. I have been packing straight grease by hand, did not know my gun took a cartridge!
Thanks for watching!!
Nice presentation. Also great info re: when you have air in the gun and how to get rid of it. Seems I always get a little of it no matter what. Thanks for sharing..
Thanks very much for watching!
Always fudged around with grease gun. Thanks. Very good.
Thanks for watching, Brad! Its one of those things we don't do often enough to remember how its done. I'm glad this vid was useful.
Dennis. I truly appreciate your programs on husqvarnas. I have a zero turn and ? all of a sudden I can't remember. It could be
LTG 2645. At any rate, you've been very informative.
I'm glad to know these are helpful! Thank you for watching, Susan!
I've had this same kind of Grease gun since I was a kid...It was my dad's and I've always hated when I had to fill it...I'd get it to work but I'd have grease all over....Thanks for the Video Dennis....BTW I got my Husky Lawnmower Straighten out today thanks to you !!!!
That's great! Two for one! :) Thanks for watching!
Thanks to you Dennis, after 30 years of filling my grease gun by removing it from the tube and pushing it in with a putty knife (embarrassed) it will be a pleasure to do it the right way, i can't wait to try it. Thanks.
Thanks for watching, Tom! I'm glad this helped....yes, you'll find this a lot quicker and a lot less messy! LOL! Trust me, I've worn my fair share of grease! haha
After doing it wrong for 30 years, you’re a master at it now, why change the way you’ve done it your whole life now?
@@ralfie8801 Because it's too sloppy and messy.
Thank you for a simple demonstration. It was a Great help to a widow trying to do some more simple maintenance of my older riding mowers. I had no idea how the grease hun worked.
I'm so glad this helped and thank you for watching! I have several videos covering different topics on riding mowers, specifically Husqvarna riders, maybe those will be of some help too. Thanks again!
Well done! I have the exact grease gun and this will help me with making sure the air is out of the system!
Thank you for watching!
Thanks Mr C!!! As elementary as this is I couldn’t figure out why mine kept leaking. Turns out my pump was missing the seal at the top when I bought it! 😂 thanks again!
Thanks for watching! I'm glad this helped you figure out the problem!
Good vid, thanks. I like to hang my guns on the wall, with the lever out, it seems to never have any air bubbles in the pump.
Good idea. Thanks for watching, Grant!
Thanks for the great tips. Never could figure out why I couldn’t get it working properly! Thanks so much!!
Thank you for watching, Jim!
Thanks for explaining how to reload my grease gun. It's been a while since I had to change a grease cartridge and your video helped a lot. I appreciate your help.
Thank you for watching! I appreciate it.
It also helps to loosen the pump a few turns from the tube before pulling the rod back to refill.
Thanks for watching! Great tip!
Hey Dennis, I used a grease gun for years and through trial and error I found a way to quickly reload a grease gun that is similar to what you do but I never had air in the grease pump or lost prime on the grease pump. When you pull the plunger back without unscrewing the tube from the gun, you can suck grease out of the grease pump thereby losing the prime.
Like you, I work over an open trash can with a couple of rags placed in easy reach. Now, assuming the grease gun is empty, grab the pull handle on the bottom and check the plunger is at the top of the tube, confirming the grease gun is empty. Leave the pull handle alone now and unscrew the top of the grease gun like you did and set it aside. Now manipulate the pull handle to push the empty cartridge out of the gun. Pull the handle out now and lock it. Insert the new tube like you did. Now screw the tube onto the grease pump but only a turn or so. Release the pull handle and slowly turn the tube fully into the grease gun. My grease guns, and I assume most grease guns have a small vent opening on the side of the grease pump top that allows air and grease to discharge. When the tube is fully screwed into the gun, the vent is sealed. Now the gun will continue pumping without any air problems.
Thanks for watching, Mark! Sounds like a great way to do it without losing prime on the pump. Thanks for that!!
I totally agree with you. If pull the plunger out first with out removing the head you suck grease out of the pump and air in causing an air lock.
I can never remember how this is supposed to be done when I need to do it ... maybe once a year. Thanks for the great explanation, Dennis!
Thanks for watching, Sid! Same, that's actually what got me to do the video haha!
buy a tractor, you'll get a lot of practice on this.
@@dwcoffey Meanwhile ... one year later ... time to reload the grease gun and ... had to watch it again! We'll see if I can remember next year, LoL.
"... ok, what did Dennis say? Was it cardboard end first, or ... dang, I'll have to go back and watch him again!"
great step by step, have older gun not used for awhile, this answered ALL my questions
Thanks for watching, Paul!
Perfect demo and verbal explanation. I like your easy going mannerism. Thanks.
Thank you David! I appreciate you watching.
I'm not trying to be disagreeable but I always unscrew the pump end of the tube off first because if you pull the plunger back first it will suck the grease out of the pump. If you unscrew the pump off the end of the tube and lay it aside then put your cartridge in when you screw it back onto the pump leave it loose at first until you push the plunger back in to help expel any air that's in the end of the cartridge and then you won't have to reprime the pump... Just my two cents from my own experiences.
That's a great tip!! Thanks for watching!
NMX 777 You would be correct that’s what happened to me the other day I had to unscrew that screw to let the air out and yes I had a little mess on my hands oh my gosh
Agree. I’ve always done it your way. When I saw him pulling the plunger first, I thought uh oh
NOW I find this! :O Yesterday, when I loaded my grease gun, I had literally half of the grease in my hands.
Thanks for watching, Zog! Yea, I wish you had found it before the grease incident! :)
back in the day (long long ago) that was how you did it. some things have actually gotten better.
Good job. You made it easy. My problem is my grease gun always leaks drips out of the hose while it is hanging in my garage.
Thanks for watching, Robert! I have found that some grease is worse about separating than others and causing drips. I use Lucas and Valvoline grease and don't have that issue with them. But, in the past when I've had other grease do that, I slip a gallon ziploc bag over the grease gun. I sure appreciate you supporting my channel!
@@dwcoffey I have a zip bag on the hose and another on the bottom of the grease gun. What a pain..
Thanks for the video! Now, I can reload the grease gun to grease the fittings on the lawn-tractor!
Awesome!! Thanks for watching!
Good video, thanks. I'm starting to do more of the maintenance on my truck and my camper. So this was helpful. I had not used one in a while. Looks like your gun is from tractor supply, it's the same as mine but I got the pistol grip version.
I don't remember where I got this gun from.....Thanks for watching, Michael!
Great video on how to load a grease gun. Just the information I was looking for. Thanks.
Thanks for watching, James! I'm glad this helped!
thats great I ben fighting with them for years!! Now I rewatch this every time I load gun..Only use it once year now for boat and trailer always forget..
I'm glad this is helpful, Todd! Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the great video. I wonder how many people have shot empty grease tubes across their garages?
I know I have! Thanks so much for watching!
Thank you for this video. I am way behind in maintaining my equipment and this tutorial will save me good deal of effort.
Thank you for watching!
great info. I bought a coffee roaster and was told to buy gun and grease. Ordered it, came..had zero clue lol. Luckily my buddy how is a race mechanic popped over lol
Thanks for watching, Rishi! I appreciate it!
Thank you very much for the video, now I know about the air and the position of the cartridge
Thank you very much for watching!
Thanks Dennis, I had to re-watch your video as It has been awhile since I changed a tube of grease, cheers
That's often the case, I think....we go so long without having to change the tube, we need a little reminder. Thanks for watching, Andrew!
Thank you! Very useful !! Won't make a mess anymore....
Thanks for watching!
Absolutely helpful for people never doing this before. Many thanks!!!!
Thank you for watching, Thomas!
Been years since Astro Van was lubed, 7 different fittings. Novice excluding air in 1 of your sequenced steps; thank you ( and towvan ready Sobo if I can locate companion ).
I will try this method and let you know if I have a successful loading of my virtually the same gun
Let me know! Thanks for watching, Brooke!
Thanks you.......you gave me a Hint for what I needed too know, it has Air inside....that the reason it's not pumping the Grease out.....I thought it was broken , you saved me some money.
Fantastic! Thanks for watching, Christopher!
@@dwcoffey it worked and hopefully I want forget this step, clearing the Air out....
Great video-thank you from Germany. Now I understand what I‘ve been doing wrong.
Thank you Bernd! I appreciate you watching!
All of your videos are top notch! Thank again.
Thanks for watching, Thomas! I appreciate your support!
Thank you, I needed to watch, I haven’t done it in awhile, and I’m about to go on a trip with a boat trailer! 👍
Ah yes, trailer bearings....always needing maintenance haha. Thanks for watching, Randolph!
Great video thanks. I've always struggled with this task - and some great tips, very useful.
I'm glad it helped! Thanks for watching, Rob!
Useful video. I have exploded a gun twice all over myself trying to figure this out. I learned the hard way!
Thanks for watching, Stephen! I'm glad this helped.
Thanks Dennis very well done- the little inportant things you covered[rubber seal being stuck]realy helped me out! looks like the other guys had rubber seal problems. I had watched another video that didn't have the rubber seal tip .Glad I found your video
Thank you for watching, Paul! I appreciate you commenting too!
Great video Mr. Dennis, from my husband!!!
Thanks for watching, Gianna! I'm glad it helped your husband!
Thank you sir! When I’m in doubt I look on TH-cam and find a man with a mustache, I know you want steer me wrong! 😎 Thank you!
Wow!! Thank you Nick!! I really appreciate the kind words! Thanks, as always, for watching!
Great instructional video, sir. I have had a grease gun sitting on the shelf because the instructions with it made no sense.
Thanks for watching, Mike!
Now I know why my grease gun leaks like a sieve. I must have thrown the seal ring away without realizing it. Great instructions. I think I have managed to insert the grease tube bass-ackwards.
Thanks for watching! I think a lot of people do that....it seems correct to put them in backwards. haha.
Thank you. You seem like a very patient kind person
Thank you so much Russ! I appreciate you watching and thanks for the comment!
Thank you for showing all the facts,
I bought several vintage types and none had any tubes in them they were all clean,
I filled one with greese never new you place a tube in them lol,I do now,
Thanks very much for watching! I'm glad this helped!
Lol its sound funny but till know i have my grease load without the tube never knew we were suppose to leave the tube in it
I've never used a tube in mine ,just put it in a pot of grease, suck it up ,bingo ,bought a new 1 tube filled gd ,went to put a tube in my old gun ,won't fit too small
I have found that if you loosen pump on grease gun and if you have a front tractor tire just bump the pump end on top of tire the bounce will make the grease fill the void and get rid of air. Be careful and don't loosen pump too much (maby 1/2 turn)
Thanks for watching, John! I've never tried that, but does it just displace the air, and cause you to eventually hit the air pocket when you get to the bottom of the tube?
Yep, agree. If you can't seem to get the air out it is likely the rubber plunger is wedged on the cardboard tube and shocking it slips it into position in the tube. Hitting on a tire keeps from denting the grease gun tube. If it is still being stubborn, I hold the grease gun upright and hit/shock the bottom on a hard surface; not so hard though to mangle your plunger.
thank you my friend long time don’t used my pump great 👍 video remember today how it works with your tips 🤛
Thank you for watching!
@@dwcoffey 👍
Yep. I've done it wrong before. Thanks. I dread reloading grease guns. Doesn't look too bad if done correctly.
I agree, Jon! I've fussed and cussed when I did it wrong. Hopefully this helps folks get a quick reminder. It's not so bad when done right. Thanks for watching!
Excellent 👍👍. Your first line made me blurt out YES!! Thanx, good vid👏
LOL! Thanks for watching, Randy!
Thanks, I threw mine in trash, Grabbed it back out and threw it in again :) now I know how to use the new one I will buy.
LOL! I've pitched a few like that! Thanks for watching, David!
I should have learned this on the farm but, I never had to load one. Thanks for saving my Manhood image!
Hey, we all need a little help on the side every now and then! :) Thank you for watching!!
Great video, trapped air in the gun has driven me crazy forever. There must be some variance in the zerk fittings as on occasion getting the “chuck” to release is a PITA. In cold weather taking the new tube indoors to warm up first is helpful.
Thanks for watching, Andy! Yes, I have found that some fittings are perfect, some are a touch too small and some are a touch too big. The small ones let the coupler fall off, the big ones make it really difficult to get the coupler on and off. Not sure why, but I guess it is like so many things.....some are just made cheaply and it shows. I have replaced difficult zerks on other equipment and eliminated most of my problems.
Dennis Coffey I bought some angled zerks at NAPA some time ago & was told that they have them in varying sizes. I guessed & I think that what I got was too big. ( seems that sizing would be for the threaded part, I’m not so sure).
Yes, they come in different diameters and threads (SAE and metric). 1/8" diameter are the most common on consumer items. If the threaded part is tapered, it is a thread-cutting fitting...if it is straight, it's made to go in a previously-threaded hole. And of course, you can buy them straight, 45-degree, 90-degree.
The man, the myth, the legend
LOL! Thanks Walkr!! I always appreciate your support!