Workshop

Best Lubricant for Power Tools (General)

Looking for the right lubricant for your power tools (general)? We compared 4 options for this use case — including common searches like drill, impact driver, circular saw, miter saw, jigsaw. Here's what works and what to avoid.

Super Lube 51004 Synthetic Oil

Oil Base: Synthetic Viscosity: ISO VG 32 Form: Dropper Bottle

PTFE-fortified synthetic with wide temp range (-45°F to 450°F). Safe on plastics and rubber.

Best for Power tools, garage doors, treadmills, high-temp or high-speed applications, 3D printers
Avoid Overkill for simple household tasks — more expensive than mineral oil
For this use Synthetic for drill chucks, saw pivots, miter saw joints

3-IN-ONE Multi-Purpose Oil

Oil Base: Mineral Viscosity: ISO VG 15 Form: Dropper Bottle

The classic do-everything light oil. A few drops stops squeaks and prevents rust on metal parts.

Best for Door hinges, drawer slides, hand tools, small mechanisms, fan motors
Avoid Plastics & rubber (can degrade them); food-contact surfaces
For this use Budget option for light-duty tools

Break-Free CLP

Oil Base: Synthetic Viscosity: ISO VG 15 Form: Dropper Bottle

Cleans, lubricates, and protects in one step. Military-spec formula.

Best for Firearms, precision tools, scissors, knives, multi-tools, any metal tool prone to rust
Avoid Plastics (some formulations may affect certain polymers)
For this use All-in-one for metal tools

Super Lube 21030 Synthetic Grease

Grease Base: Synthetic Viscosity: NLGI #2 Form: Squeeze Tube

PTFE-fortified synthetic, -45°F to 450°F. The go-to multi-material grease.

Best for 3D printer rails & lead screws, bearings, power tool gears, RC cars, anything needing long life
Avoid More expensive — unnecessary for simple low-load household tasks
For this use For internal gears — longer service life
See the full lubricant guide →