I used to use Benelli MF-82 on AR's. It was obviously intended for inertia shotguns but is light weight and worked perfect on my AR's. Unfortunately it only ships with Benelli shotguns & is not available in the US.
When I started getting low I went hunting for the best replacement. I tried a few and Hoppe's Elite Black is my second favorite.
My favorite hands down by far & the best damn gun oil no one's ever heard of is Polydyn 2A. It is a polymer based lubricant (not CLP).
Polydyn is a Veteran owned company & it's 100% American made in Houston TX.
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While searching for the best Gun lubes I remembered Polydyn and thought well hell I wish they made one. I was very happy to find out they do.
They absolutely suck at marketing it though.
I have been running it for a while now on AR's, bolt guns, & pistol slides. It has not disappointed.
I am very familiar with Polydyn products & used them extensively through the 90's & early 2000's, mainly their dry film bearing coatings & even 1 fully coated EAA witness that ran slick as shit with zero lube. The bearing coatings were used on Marine race, Sprint car, Super late models etc.
Anyone remember the IROC series? Ever remember one breaking during a race? I'm sure it must have happened, but I don't remember a failure.
The IROC cars were all identically prepared & all were fully treated with Polydyn's coatings and additive lubricants.
Only place I know of to purchase it is Amazon.
The Polydyn stuff sounds neat.
BUT!
All these "torture test" videos comparing different gun oils at high heat are ridiculous. I couldn't care less if one oil is only good to 300* and another is good to 800* (or whatever). It just doesn't matter, and it does NOT mean that the higher temp oil is better for our uses.
We're talking about lubrication inside an AR receiver here; if it reaches even 200* it's already causing serious burns on your hands. Think about that for a second; you're not going to keep shooting a rifle at temps that literally can cook your hands and face, and that's still way lower temperature than reviews like that video. So why should we care if one oil cooks off faster at temperatures far higher than the rifle will ever see?
We're not trying to lubricate the muzzle of a machine gun barrel or body of a suppressor; we're lubricating parts that rarely (if ever) get too hot to touch.
Way too many videos get posted comparing oils in various environments that have nothing at all to do with the purpose of the oil, and lots of people believe them like it means something. People need to start thinking for themselves more, about this stuff and a lot of other things. Sorry for the rant, but idiot reviews and snake-oil advertising rub me the wrong way.
Show me videos that test wear at room temperature, or thickening in cold temperatures - then we can actually talk about something useful.