Frog Lubed my Shield tonight

2tango2

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Picked up some Frog Lube and treated my Shield tonight. Followed instructions and also watched various vids on YouTube

Who has used this stuff? It smells great lol. After wiping it down it doesn't look like enough lubricant on the gun. According to what I've read and seen this is fine as once gun heats up the lubrication comes back

Can anyone vouch for this?


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yes I tried last summer first time you shoot it and see it become slick again and how much easier it is to clean you will through all old products in garbage big fan of frog lube
 
Ive used it on my glocks and never used anything else. I treated my shield last week and worked fine at my last training session.
 
I'm interested to see specifics as to how and where you applied. I just bought some frog lube myself because the wife doesn't like the smell of other stuff and am new to my S&W as well. I found the download link to the scan of the armourers guide on this forum and see the spots where your supposed to apply a drop of oil but frog lube seems much thicker, doesn't seem like it would spread out and coat like a drop of oil would.
 
Just ordered some for my gun and tools I carry at the Fire Dept. (They tend to get rust pretty quick). I watched the video and the guy covered his whole gun, wouldn't that make the slide slick and harder to pull back?
 
No it really doesn't. If you watch the videos you'll see what I mean. You coat just about the whole gun after heating it up. The paste liquifies and leaves a waxy coating. After letting it bond you wipe down with a microfiber cloth. It leaves the slide smooth and clean but not slippery.

I posted the question more about the lubrication and how it holds up.

With frog lube you ignore where S&W tells you to lubricate
 
Here is something I wrote up on a Ruger forum.

Let me chime in at this point. I have been using FrogLube for 12 months on a 9MM XDM and 9 months on an M&P22.

The XDM has over 2800 rounds on it using FL. The M&P has 5700 rounds on it using FL.

Neither piece shows any sign of extraordinary wear. Each pistol has the original parts and performs perfectly with various ammo.

What I do is clean after every practice session. I start by wiping off the crud (which comes off easily) with a paper towel. I then clean using a 2 inch patch that I saturate fairly well with the FL paste. I wipe everything down with that to remove what the towel missed and to get into each nook and cranny. This process is for everything except the inside of the barrel.

For the barrel I use M-Pro7 cleaner. I use it because it is non-petroleum and won't affect the FL. On periodic cleanings I also use M-Pro7 copper remover inside the barrel. After running a couple of dry clean patches through the bores to remove the cleaner, I then apply some FL paste to a mop and pass it through a couple of times. This leaves a thin coating of FL.

Periodically, I take down my magazines and run a patch with some FL paste on it to clean them up. I don't use much FL on mags, just enough to clean.

Before final assembly I put a few drops of FL liquid on the outside of the barrel (I wipe the ramp well with the patch that has the paste), the rails and other other points where friction occurs.

I have found that this method leaves a thin coat of FL on every point of wear and does not result in any dry firing.

At the range it doesn't take long to see the FL leeching from the barrel and providing a lube beyond what the liquid supplied. It doesn't run off, and as the pistol cools, the FL turns waxy looking. Judging by the fact that I have not had to repeat the initial process of treatment, and that the pistols still have plenty of FL on them while in use, tells me that the stuff does what it claims.

As a side note, I tried another product that is highly touted as a CLP and is even more expensive than FL and it only took one range session for me to chuck it and go back to FL.

The above process may sound complicated but it really isn't and I can clean a pistol in a few minutes. The FL liquid doesn't dry out between range sessions, so once it is applied it will be there a week or two later when I'm ready to shoot.

I believe the preparation is the key. Clean really well with any cleaner you wish, then wipe all the cleaner off with a rag wet with rubbing alcohol. I live in a warm climate so I just sit the disassembled piece out in the sun for it to get hot. Then I apply the FL with the brush they provide. Just apply it liberally. Let it sit for about 45 minutes then wipe down.

I suppose that on an annual basis I may start the process of heating and reapplying. Though for now it doesn't appear that would be necessary.

What's great about FL is that you can put it on the outside of the piece, then wipe it off and the bluing looks fantastic.
 
Check out this you tube video, it shows how to treat you firearms with Frog Lube. FrogLube CLP - YouTube Great stuff!! Well worth the cost and the effort. Residue crud does not stick to this stuff!!

RIB-IT! RIB-IT! :cool::cool::cool:
 
I use it on all my guns, great stuff. At first it seems like a pain to pre heat the metal parts with a hair dryer, but after a few cleanings it just becomes part of the process. Guns clean up easy after firing.
 
I've been using frog lube exclusively on our M&P40c and Kahr CW9. While it isn't necessary to clean the pistols after each range visit, we do because my wife and I enjoy doing it. My wife likes the scent which means she doesn't mind cleaning her pistol (the Kahr).

We heat up the parts with a hair dryer, use frog lube everywhere to clean each part (using traditional patches, bore brush, etc), use a microfiber towel to clean off the lube, reassemble and we're done. The product works perfectly. Yes, the lube reappears as the gun heats up from firing. Never any problems. Bullets feed every time (I also disassemble and froglube the mags). No failures to fire.

I'm a believer!

Marcus
 
I have been using Frog Lube also. I use it mostly on my pistols, but have used it on my AR and shotguns as well.

It does seem like there isn't enough left on the gun if you follow the instructions. Still, I took the chance and have had zero problems with my guns.

I don't heat them up every time. I just use the liquid stuff to re-grease after cleaning.
 
Thanks Lobo but the manufacturer doesn't show the 'kit' that everyone refers to.

There are a couple dealers on Amazon selling the kits for around $29 shipped. I'd like to try the paste and the liquid.

Realistically I have so many of the latest and greatest lubes in the gun cabinet that I easily have enough to last my lifetime and probably my kid's lifetimes also.

I thought the TW25 stuff is pretty nice and I like the sample bottle (with the needle applicator) of Weapon Shield I received not long ago... Is this Frog stuff good enough to quit using those products?
 
whats the general consensus for the barrel? I just got the kit that has the paste and the liquid.
 
Thanks Lobo but the manufacturer doesn't show the 'kit' that everyone refers to.

There are a couple dealers on Amazon selling the kits for around $29 shipped. I'd like to try the paste and the liquid.

Realistically I have so many of the latest and greatest lubes in the gun cabinet that I easily have enough to last my lifetime and probably my kid's lifetimes also.

I thought the TW25 stuff is pretty nice and I like the sample bottle (with the needle applicator) of Weapon Shield I received not long ago... Is this Frog stuff good enough to quit using those products?

Yes. And even better than you would think. Get some.
 
Never used FL, might have to try it one day.

So is no other lube/oil required after using FL?
Anyone got any pics of the inside of slide of their guns after say 1,000rds or so? I find it hard to believe that it shows no markings or that you can't see contact areas...

I've been using Mobil-1 to lube for so long & have had good luck. But I'd really like to see the inside of a pistol that gets shot alot, not a safe queen.
 

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