When Krytox™ PFPE Oils and Greases Make Sense
Krytox™ should be considered when the operating environment is severe enough that conventional hydrocarbon or synthetic lubricants keep failing.
Good fit indicators:
- High-temperature lubricant degradation
- Chemical exposure
- Oxygen or reactive gas exposure
- Elastomer or plastic compatibility concerns
- Long relubrication interval requirements
- High-consequence failure points
- Applications where lubricant migration, evaporation, or oxidation creates repeat work
- Sootblower gearboxes and other difficult-to-service equipment
Krytox™ is rarely the cheapest lubricant on the shelf. But that is the wrong comparison. The right comparison is the total cost of repeat relubrication, bearing replacement, downtime, rebuild labor, and emergency sourcing. If a failure keeps coming back, the premium lubricant may be the lower-cost system decision in the long run.
Where DOWFROST™ HD Fits in Corrosion and
Heat Transfer Fluid Standardization
DOWFROST™ HD belongs in the playbook because not every maintenance failure is a bearing or gearbox issue. Power generation facilities also depend on closed-loop heating, cooling, hydronic, and heat transfer systems. When those systems corrode, leak, freeze, or require frequent fluid replacement, procurement gets pulled into urgent sourcing.
Good fit indicators:
- Closed-loop corrosion risk
- Mixed-metal systems
- Freeze or burst protection requirements
- Industrial heating or cooling loops
- Leak detection needs
- Planned flush-and-fill work
- Emergency refill planning
Standardizing DOWFROST™ HD helps reduce the risk of mystery glycol, off-spec blends, and poor inhibitor packages. It also gives maintenance a cleaner sourcing path for planned maintenance and emergency fills.
How Procurement Can Reduce Repeat Failures
The most useful procurement move is to stop treating lubricant requests as one-off replenishment and start treating them as a standardization opportunity.
Ask five questions before approving the next repeat buy:
What symptom are we trying to stop?
Is the issue wear, corrosion, seizure, leakage, washout, oxidation, drying, seal damage, or short service life?
What changed?
Did the operating temperature, duty cycle, exposure, equipment age, PM interval, or supplier substitution change?
What materials are involved?
Confirm metals, elastomers, plastics, coatings, seals, and any chemical exposure.
What does maintenance want less of?
Do they want less relubrication, fewer rebuilds, shorter outage work, easier disassembly, fewer leaks, fewer emergency orders, or fewer compatibility questions?
Is the current product actually approved for the failure mode?
A lubricant can be approved for purchasing and still be wrong for the application.
Build a Lubricant Standardization List Before the Next Outage
The best time to fix a lubrication standard is before the next outage, not during it.
A useful power generation lubricant standard should include the following:
- Approved product
- Application
- Equipment type
- Failure mode addressed
- Operating temperature range
- Load and speed considerations
- Material compatibility notes
- Relubrication interval
- Storage and handling requirements
- Approved package sizes
- Emergency substitution rules
- Supplier contact path
ChemPoint can help procurement and maintenance teams organize MOLYKOTE
®, Krytox™, and DOWFROST™ HD options around the actual failure modes showing up in the plant. That makes the buying process cleaner, the maintenance conversation easier, and the next PO a little less likely to be a repeat of the last failure.
Stop Reordering the Same Failure
If your maintenance team is replacing the same bearing, rebuilding the same gearbox, fighting the same seized fasteners, or flushing the same loop again, ChemPoint can help you source against the failure mode.
Talk to a ChemPoint specialist about MOLYKOTE
®, Krytox™, and DOWFROST™ HD options for power generation maintenance.