First be sure the grease fitting themselves are good, and many nowdays are not. If they are good then penetrating oil can often help. If you can get a pipe fitting in the grease fitting hole in such a manner that you can fill it with penetrating oil, and then install the grease fitting, that's the best thing to do. Once you have the fitting in, everything full of penetrating oil, and the grease fitting in place also, put your grease gun on it and give it a pump or so to make it build pressure. If your lucky, and it tends to work for me about 75% of the time (especially if you give the penetrating oil time to soak in good, and free up the blockage) you'll get a good bit of pressure built and then you'll feel a pop as the joint starts taking grease. That's about the easiest way I've found to get an joint that isn't taking grease to start taking it again. Usually the next alternative is to disassemble the joint and go from there.
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Today's Featured Article - Talk of the Town: Modern Diesel Fuel in an Old Tractor - by Staff. This interestin discussion is from the Tractor Talk Discussion Forum. Remember that safety is your first priority - make sure you know what you are doing before attempting a potentially dangerous activity!
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