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I hope the bearing is in close tolerence enough not to have much of a gap, bearing has gap would wobble and cause excessive wear. The purpose of the lubricant in turntable bearing is to decrease or eliminate friction. Light weight oil would not last as long on metal surface. Mobil 1 synthetic will leave a thin film of oil bond to the metal, that's what I use. Again, the lubricant is not to fill any gap in close tolerence bearing, it is to decrease, minimize, or eliminate friction between metal. Turntable bearing won't generate heat like a high speed motor, anytime you rub metal together will generate heat, but it's not a concern.
I hope the bearing is in close tolerence enough not to have much of a gap, bearing has gap would wobble and cause excessive wear. The purpose of the lubricant in turntable bearing is to decrease or eliminate friction. Light weight oil would not last as long on metal surface. Mobil 1 synthetic will leave a thin film of oil bond to the metal, that's what I use. Again, the lubricant is not to fill any gap in close tolerence bearing, it is to decrease, minimize, or eliminate friction between metal.
There will always be a gap, even if it's .00025". As the gap gets smaller, the oil viscosity thins. None of my motors require any lube, including my Hurst, but if the VPI Classis motor requires it, then by all means, it probably should be lubed once a year. Most motors of this size have sealed oil impregnated bearings. If your (other brand) table doesn't mention oiling the motor, you should consult the manufacturer before doing so, as this may be harmful to the motor (gets into the windings, pole pieces and attracts dust which will make the motor slow down).Wayner
If there is any room for oil, there is a gap. No gap = no room for oil = no lubrication.
As the OP and another poster mentioned, for inverted bearing like the newer VPI products, an oil bath won't work as you can't get enough oil to climb to the ball bearing, so grease is called for, Harry correctly recommends standard lithium grease as the best option.
If there is any room for oil, there is a gap. No gap = no room for oil = no lubrication
RCAG claimed there should be absolutely no gap in the bearing and that's just plain wrong...unless you want metal on metal contact.
If your bearing is a oil lite bronze bearing I highly recommend soaking it in ATF. The bronze will soak in some ATF and will auto lubricate.
ATF has a higher surface tension than petrolium based oil. That's why it's what I used on top of a dry moly coating on all engines I built. Flows out quicker as well.
Wrong again, metal to metal contact can have no gap (theoretically), but needs oil, otherwise the heat will destroy the metal. Lubricant minimize friction of metal to metal contact, and no gap, decrease heat, no gap, makes the metal move, no gap. You rub two pieces of smooth ice cubes together, no gap, and they will move, no gap.
Oil must be present between two pieces (I.E. in a small space between parts = "gap") in order to work. Otherwise, there is no lubrication between parts and you have metal-on-metal contact. You're lacking a basic understanding of lubrication. I recommend you do some research in the field. Let's not get any more off topic and waste the other ACer's time by going back and forth on this. Start with Google. My apologies to the OP.