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I used the same grease in my motors, but with a dab or two of red’s speed grease mixed in to it. That way it had the same thick consistency as the grease I removed (thick) but had less rolling resistance than just the WL grease alone.

Most industrial facilities have bearings that rotate faster than normal processing equipment. When it comes to lubricating these pieces of equipment, not all lubricants behave the same way. …

But the few times I’ve tried to service motor bearings ( not in Esk8, just in general ) they seemed a lot more picky about it, and about everything else.

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I originally packed it full but ended up removing some/ it came out on its own while testing the bearing. It has been several months since replacing the grease in all of my motor bearings and I haven’t had any issues with them.

As for overpacking itself, I’m sure excess grease will work its way out pretty quickly so I don’t think that will do any harm for the bearing, but excess grease being flung around your motor is probably not good. Will attract dust and junk for sure.

I probably would not be using WLG for a motor bearing, for that I’d make sure Id make sure I’m using a grease that has motor bearings listed among its applications. The Moly 274 grease I like does mention electric motors in its technical data sheet, as do many even generic greases, but I might even still look for something especially targeted towards motor bearing applications.

I packed in white lithium grease into a large motor bearing (58mm), they’re SKF and didnt have much grease in them. I filled it 90% full, its pretty hard to move, and has no free spin at all. Not like it free spun before i put the grease in, but i can feel the resistance from the grease. The stock crap bearing has decent free spin