Hi All!
Several of you have asked by email about my freewheel grease injector. The photo below shows it in some detail.
This is not a trivial operation, but well worth it if you -- like me -- prefer your freewheels to uh, freewheel in near-perfect silence. Just the ticket for sneaking up on wildlife, and far better than the usual buzz. The freewheel innards are protected against water and dust, and -- if properly wiped first and done right -- the next injection flushes out any contaminants that have worked their way into the freewheel body. Springs and pawls stay nicely lubricated, and you can pretty well count on the bearings and races lasting through any number of cog replacements.
I find the grease holds up and nicely quietens the freewheel for the better part of a thousand miles/1609km.
Greasing a freewheel is serious business. First, you have to pick the proper grease, and for me that has been Phil Wood grease. It is the perfect consistency to prevent the freewheel pawls from sticking in any weather, yet maintains a nice edge-deal of grease while breaking-down nicely into oil of just-right consistency for the freewheel bearing races and pawls. The threaded fitting on the tool perfectly mates with the neck threads on a tube of Phil grease, so it is an easy task to spin on a tube after fitting the injector, standing on said tube, and waiting for results on the other side (a thin bit of grease will emerge around the freewheel body; when you see that, stop, and unthread the tube of grease. You can also use an injectable tapered-end bulk-tube grease gun or screw in a zerk-type fitting for bulk cartridge-tube grease guns with flexible hoses.
Getting the injector off is another matter and requires a freewheel pullerplaced in a bench vise, and a pin wrench is then used to spin the injectors out of the freewheel body's hub mounting threads.
My injector bears no brand name, but I believe it is by Bicycle Research. The later model with Phil Wood markings used a cast body with finger grips, where this one is machined and requires a pin wrench to remove. Nifty tool, makes the freewheel last longer, and completely and utterly obsolete in a world populated by cassette freehubs...unless you still have a few freewheels you like to keep going (like me!).
Best,
Dan.