GerrySM
ArboristSite Operative
From another thread:
I have tried various vegi oils for my saws and found some of them to be troublesome, as they tend to set rock solid after a while, they work fine when they are straight out of the bottle, but if left for several days, they start to gum everything up, and a nightmare to clean up afterwards
This has also been my experience with Canola Oil. My chains are rock solid frozen by the canola, a semi-drying oil, after a month or so sitting time. My hedge trimmers lock up solid with canola too.
I am an occasional chainsaw user who wants to use healthy and enviro-friendly vege oils, but need to avoid the oxidation and polymerisation that comes with canola.
My question: what about using non-drying vegetable oils like peanut oil?
Anyone tried it?
In theory, you would not get the resins forming.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drying_oil
(Note 1: here in Australia, peanut oil is 2-4x the price of canola oil)
(Note 2: there are other "semi-drying oils" - Corn oil, Cottonseed oil, Sesame oil, Grape seed oil)