Wife says her mixer is leaking oil. Google says grease replacement is answer. Any else do this? And any advice?
How old is your unit? You may have a main shaft seal going bad and then it drips into simple planetary for the mixer shaft. I believ3 I still have the original service manuals on that unit. This was when Hobart owned the division. They spun it off later.
And it is NGLI 2 rated, like for vehicle wheel bearings, and Snapon uses it in their ratchet heads. It really is SUPERLUBE.I use Superlube in the 4 mixers I service in a commercial bakery. Works great, NSF H-1 certified (aka safe for incidental food contact aka food safe).
This is what I used when I recently rebuilt ours after a few gears disintegrated: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0722VGTHJ/?tag=atomicindus08-20
The grease from Kitchenaid is way overpriced. That looks like a good choice.
It is of course best to replace the plastic gearbox with a metal one before gears get trashed. When I did that to mine, I was able to reuse all of the grease.
Truthfully, for the KitchenAid mixers, if you (or your spouse) plan to use it regularly especially for kneading and what not, then step up to the Professional 6000HD or higher models. These utilize a DC Motor which is much better suited for mixing and kneading duties. The torque curve of the DC motor fits the kneads of a mixer VERY nicely. Additionally, it has an ENTIRELY different all metal dual planetary reduction gearbox.
Got a pair of these in the commercial bakery. They're total beasts that are very tough to slow down. They dealt with kneading bread dough for hours a day with flying colors, though they did get uncomfortably hot in the process. Eventually upgraded to an A-200T. Now that thing will rip your arm off and not think twice.
Can't imagine what anyone does to these machines that damages gears, throwing frozen butter in the bowl?...
Got a pair of these in the commercial bakery. They're total beasts that are very tough to slow down. They dealt with kneading bread dough for hours a day with flying colors, though they did get uncomfortably hot in the process. Eventually upgraded to an A-200T. Now that thing will rip your arm off and not think twice.
Can't imagine what anyone does to these machines that damages gears, throwing frozen butter in the bowl?
I used them commercally for 40 yrs before retiring, the only one ive seen get smoked was used with the pasta attachment, stupid cooks.
I had the 5qt, 20qt , 30qt and 60qt.
Sold them all still running when I retired, best mixers in the world....bar non.
Either a design flaw, or wrong choice in aftermarket parts.
For a while, Kitchenaid switched to a composite gear case that is well known to flex (you wouldn't have seen this in machines from 40 years ago). This causes gears to break eventually, as correct gear alignment is critical to their longevity. With this gear case, failure is more of a when, then an if. When I learned about this issue, I got a replacement cast metal case (that is known not to have this problem), and swapped out the part. While I was in there, I saw that there was no contamination of the grease by metal, or wear on the gears, so in my case, I caught it well before it became a problem.
Aftermarket beaters can also put undue stress on the gears. One of my favorite tools is a beater/scraper. This has a silicone edge that wipes down the bowl as it mixes. The genuine one has only one silicone edge. The fakes usually have two, which puts twice the stress on the gears. This attachment can also be a bit harsh if you're mixing with chocolate chips in the bowl, as they get caught between the beater and the bowl.
