🛠️ Keep your ride smooth with Honda’s trusted silicone grease!
Genuine Honda 08798-9013 Silicone Grease is a lightweight, durable lubricant engineered to meet Honda’s exact specifications, ensuring optimal fit, protection, and performance for your vehicle’s maintenance needs.
Manufacturer | Honda |
Brand | Genuine Honda |
Item Weight | 4.6 ounces |
Package Dimensions | 7.4 x 1.77 x 1.34 inches |
Item model number | 08798-9013 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Manufacturer Part Number | 08798-9013 |
OEM Part Number | 08798 9013, 087989013 |
Voltage | 12 Volts |
U**R
Genuine Honda Silicone grease
This grease is amazing treatment for car seals and rubber elements. After washing car seals I applied is sparingly and let it seat for at least 30 minutes.After that gently take off any excess with a microfiber towel. The seal became supple, the car quieter, less dust and air conditioning working not as hard. All car flexes but especially the big ones, so the seals must be soft.Separately you need to treat all bushing, suspension and other seals which you can reach.For a full sized SUV on a first treatment I used two tubes but subsequently I expect only one tube every 6 months or so. Amazing product.The real disappointment is that delivery in Kuwait is handled by Aramex on behalf of the Amazon. This company is completely unreachable and non responsive. Really awful experience (and not the first one) with Aramex. They even suspended delivery because more information is required, while address is clearly stated on the box. Aramex does not even have a person to talk to in Kuwait only by form and they never call back.
D**R
This stuff is a sovereign remedy for many things that ailed my '96 Honda Civic!
It was especially helpful for treating the weather-seals around the door and trunk with! I use it in pivots, bearings, sliding-areas, wherever I need things to rub other things without being ruined! As this car is 27-ish years old and I'm doing a middling-serious teardown and rebuild, I've had a LOT of stuff I needed this for. It is excellent for lubrication AND for conditioning some of the seals and gaskets; follow the service manuals and this stuff has a lot of uses for maintenance!I don't know if it's safe to eat, but it's really close IMHO. I don't feel a burning need to get it off of my skin the moment it touches me, unlike I do with some oils and many specialist grease types; I wipe it off eventually, but it never feels like it's "doing something awful to my skin". I mean...don't try to use it for tanning-lotion or anything, but it is (to me, so far, in my uses, etc etc etc) so far is not-bad for me when I get it on me. It's VERY good for softening my slightly-stiffened weather gaskets, too! I used to get rain in one door. Once I cleaned the door frame area and the weatherstrip, that didn't solve the issue, but working some of this into my now-clean weather-seal like the maintenance manual says I should have been doing all along, the leak DID finally stop! I still need to replace that weather-seal entirely for both doors, but I can't do that until my major work is finished...but until then, my interior is no longer at risk of rusting from water coming in around the door like it had been!This is a decent bit of grease. I think I may run out before I finish my rebuild, but I'm not sure I will run out...it's a good bit of grease. It's the size of a middling-large tube of toothpaste, and the grease goes a good way during my uses. There's just a LOT of stuff any 27 year old "lived in south Florida and middle-Texas for 2/3rds of its life" car would need, so there's a lot of dust, general wear, and sun-damage to fix up..!I love this stuff. I also use it on my 3d printer rails, just to mention! Seems to work well so far. Mostly, it's for my Civic...but it works on other stuff too of course!
S**Y
Miracle for squeaky Tesla door seals
If you own a Tesla, you will start to experience squeaks and rattles. A good place to start is applying this grease to your door seals.With the frameless windows, a lot of the weight sits on the door seals to stay in place. During torsion in the frame over bumps and different level surfaces, you will hear something that sounds like squeaking and rattling. Odds are the door seals are a little dry and could use some lubricant. That’s where this comes in. Part of Hondas long standing service bulletins for squeaky seals on the Odyssey van doors and Del Sol’s targa top leaking, this is magic stuff.There isn’t an exact science to the application of it, but general rules. Wipe down the door seals to remove any gunk. You can use a little water, but don’t use alcohol or cleanser if possible. We are trying to keep those seals from drying out. Then, just apply a thin layer as you go around, making sure to get it into the gaps. Wipe off any excess. Let it sit for 10 minutes before closing the door again. This lets the grease soak in and expand. I would start with the bottom seals of the doors. You can do the windows if the first part doesn’t completely help, but you will need to have more finesse and you will end up with some of the grease on your windows.I used it on the bottom and pretty much night and day. No more squeaks and rattles from the doors! About 2 months in with rain and still no noise. Plan to reapply again in 6 months or so. This single tube will last beyond the life of the car if you are just using it for the seals.Add it to your Tesla owner toolkit!
M**I
NICE!
This stuff is great. No complaints. It did exactly what it said it would do. I haven't used anything else like it so I have nothing to compare it to but, I was very pleased with the resultsI put this on the gasket around my camper shell, door frame, cabin slider window, exterior windows, interior rubber Parts, shifting boot etc etcEverything seems pretty slick. I had some old pieces of rubber that I thought for sure needed to be replaced but this did a very good job at making it as good as it could be. I've left it on there for a couple of weeks and I think in the hotter days of summer it takes time to seep into the material. I have noticed that the rapper does seem a little bit puffierIt seems to work well on rubber and various forms of vinyl trim and other soft rubber like parts around the car. Some parts were so cracked and try I thought they were plastic. Nothing has been lubricated probably in over 22 years and this truck has been sitting outside in 100 degree weatherIt's a very very greasy but, after it soaks in you can wipe off the excess and it looks very fresh
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 day ago