Features
- Multi-Purpose Application: Ideal for automotive, marine, industrial, and household use. Protects machinery, tools, and metal components from corrosion and reduces friction for smooth, efficient operation.
- Water-Displacing Formula: Prevents rust by displacing moisture and leaves behind a durable, clear protective layer that resists dirt and dust. Works effectively in both dry and wet environments.
- High-Performance Lubricant: Reduces wear and tear on moving parts, increasing the lifespan of equipment. Ideal for lubricating nuts, bolts, hinges, locks, and chains to keep them running smoothly.
- Easy-to-Use Aerosol Spray: The convenient 11 oz aerosol can offers precision application with an adjustable nozzle. Spray reaches tight spaces, providing thorough lubrication where it’s needed.
- Non-Conductive and Safe on Surfaces: This lubricant does not conduct electricity, making it perfect for electrical components. Safe to use on various materials, including plastic, metal, and rubber.
Specifications
Size | 11 Ounces |
Unit Count | 1 |
Multi-purpose spray lubricant for automotive, marine, industrial, and household use that reduces friction and protects metal components, tools, and fasteners from corrosion. Its water-displacing formula leaves a clear protective film that resists dirt and dust; the non-conductive 11 oz aerosol with an adjustable nozzle reaches tight spaces and is safe on metal, plastic, rubber, and electrical components.
Gasoila Lube-It All Deep Lubricating Oil – Multi-Purpose Spray Lubricant for Industrial, Automotive, Marine, and Household Use, Long-Lasting Protection, Water-Resistant Formula, 11 oz Aerosol Can Review
Why I reached for this can
A squeaky garage door is my litmus test for any general-purpose lubricant. It’s a simple mechanism with mixed materials, exposed to the elements, and notoriously quick to reveal whether a product is a short-lived solvent or a true lubricant. After a month of regular use on the door, and plenty of other jobs around the shop and house, Lube-It All has earned a permanent spot on my shelf.
What it is
Lube-It All is a multi-purpose lubricating oil in an 11 oz aerosol, built around a water-displacing, non-conductive formula. It’s designed to reduce friction, flush moisture off surfaces, and leave behind a thin, clear protective film that resists dirt. The adjustable nozzle accepts a straw for pinpoint work or can be used without it for broader coverage, and the chemistry is billed as safe on metal, plastic, rubber, and electrical components.
Performance in real use
Garage door hardware: I degreased a section of rollers and hinges as a control and applied a light coat of Lube-It All. The chatter dropped to a dull hum on the first cycle. Two months later, the door still runs quiet, without the gummy buildup I often see with heavier oils. The film remains present, but it isn’t attracting the kind of dust paste that some petroleum lubes do.
Automotive hinges and latches: Thin-bodied sprays excel at creeping into tight pivot points, and this one does. Door hinges stopped squeaking immediately, and the hood latch went from sticky to snappy after a short soak and a few actuations. It’s not as aggressive as a dedicated penetrating oil for seized fasteners, but for general lubrication and corrosion prevention on moving parts, it performs well.
Electrical connectors: The non-conductive claim matters when you’re chasing intermittent trailer lights or moisture-prone connectors. I spritzed a damp 7-way trailer plug, worked it in with a few insertions, and saw steady continuity afterward. The film beaded water instead of letting it dwell. I wouldn’t use any aerosol oil on open high-voltage contacts, but for low-voltage connectors, switches, and relay sockets, this provided confidence without drama.
Outdoor hardware: I’ve been using it on gate hinges, a shed padlock, and a deck slider. After rain, water sheets off treated surfaces. The padlock keyway stayed smooth after repeated wet-dry cycles, and the exterior shackle shows fewer flash-rust spots than a neighboring untreated lock.
Chains and cables: On a bicycle chain, it runs quiet out of the gate and stays cleaner than a typical wet shop oil, though it’s still a wet film and will pick up dust off-road. For a general-purpose shop can, that’s expected; for dedicated cycling, I’d still choose a chain-specific lube tailored to the conditions. On garage door opener chains and control cables, it’s near ideal—thin enough to penetrate the links, substantial enough to remain.
Water displacement and protection
The water-displacing behavior is clear and immediate. Spray it on a visibly damp surface and you’ll watch moisture move aside as the film spreads. More importantly, the film persists. I tested on freshly washed brake backing plates and the underside of door sills (avoiding rotors and pads, of course); a week later, water still beaded and the surfaces looked bright. On mild surface rust, it darkens the oxide slightly and slows further browning. This isn’t a rust converter, but as a preventer, it’s effective.
Feel, film, and cleanliness
This is decidedly a lubricant, not just a solvent with a little oil. It leaves a light, slick film that you can feel on your fingertips. Compared with thinner water-displacing sprays, Lube-It All doesn’t evaporate to dryness; the protective layer is deliberate and has staying power. That has two consequences: it lasts longer between applications, and it’s not the right choice when you need a completely dry, non-residue finish (think woodworking finishing prep or dust-sensitive optics). On tools and hardware, the film resists dust better than heavier oils, and it wipes to a clean sheen with a shop rag.
Odor is typical of petroleum aerosols—noticeable but not aggressive—and it dissipates quickly with ventilation. I didn’t see staining on painted metal or clear plastics, but I always spot-test plastics and rubber; formulations vary, and a quick check prevents surprises.
Nozzle and application control
Application control is unusually good. The valve modulates smoothly, so you can meter out a whisper of oil with a gentle press or lay down a wider coat with a full squeeze. The included straw turns it into a precise applicator for hinges, lock cylinders, and linkages, and the fan without the straw is narrow enough for small brackets without fogging the whole area.
Two minor gripes: the straw doesn’t have a built-in storage clip on the can, and it’s a simple push-fit. If you bump it while working in a cramped space, it can loosen. I keep a spare taped to the can just in case. Also, like many aerosols, the first press after sitting can produce a slightly heavy first droplet, so I start on a rag to avoid a surprise blob on a delicate part.
Materials compatibility and electrical safety
I’ve used it on:
- Metals: steel, aluminum, and brass, no staining or adverse reactions.
- Plastics: ABS housings and nylon cable guides looked unharmed and stayed matte.
- Rubber: EPDM door seals and grommets showed no swelling or softness after a day.
The non-conductive formulation makes it a sensible choice around low-voltage electrical parts. It’s handy for cleaning and lubricating potentiometer casings, switches, and plugs where you want moisture pushed out and a protective film left behind. As always with aerosols near electronics: power down, spray sparingly, and give solvents a moment to flash before reenergizing.
Durability and reapplication
On garage door hardware, one application lasted a couple of months before a light refresh brought it back to near-silent operation. Outdoor hinges are holding up at the six-week mark despite rain. For frequently cycled mechanisms—door hinges, latches, light-duty chains—I found myself reapplying less often than with thinner sprays, which aligns with the intent of a more substantial lubricant base.
Where it shines and where it doesn’t
Strengths:
- Versatile: one can handles household, automotive, and light marine tasks well.
- Protective: excellent water displacement and a film that actually protects.
- Precise: controllable valve and straw make it easy to avoid overspray.
- Electrical-friendly: non-conductive film is useful on connectors and switches.
Limitations:
- Not a dedicated penetrant: for seized, rust-frozen fasteners, a true penetrant still wins.
- Not a dry lube: in dust-critical environments or on woodworking setups pre-finish, choose a dry film or graphite.
- Straw and storage: the straw could lock in more securely, and there’s no on-can holder.
- Price: it’s typically priced above commodity aerosols, though the reduced reapplication frequency helps offset that.
Safety notes
Common-sense reminders: it’s flammable as an aerosol—use with ventilation and keep away from open flames. Avoid brake friction surfaces and paint you care about until you’ve spot-tested. Wipe off excess; more is not better with lubricants, and a thin film performs best.
The bottom line
Lube-It All hits a sweet spot that a lot of “do-everything” sprays miss: it actually lubricates, it actually protects, and it doesn’t make a dusty mess. If you maintain a garage door, keep a couple of vehicles humming, or want one can that can handle damp connectors, sticky locks, and squeaky hardware without resorting to a different specialty product each time, this is a reliable, low-fuss choice.
Recommendation: I recommend Lube-It All as a primary, general-purpose lubricant for shops, garages, and households. It’s effective, long-lasting, and genuinely versatile, with the added benefit of being non-conductive for light electrical work. If your tasks skew toward frozen fasteners or environments that demand a totally dry film, supplement it with a penetrant and a dry lube. For everyone else, this one can replace a cluster of lesser sprays and do the job better.
Project Ideas
Business
Mobile Maintenance & Lubrication Service
Offer on‑site quick‑fix visits for homeowners, small businesses and marinas—services include lubricating gates, locks, hinges, chains and small machinery to prevent failures. Charge per visit or sell memberships (seasonal tune‑ups) and bundle the spray with inspection reports and prioritized repair recommendations.
DIY Seasonal Maintenance Kits
Assemble and sell curated kits for niches (bike kits, boat winterize kits, home hinge & lock kits) that include an 11 oz can, applicator straw, rags, brushes and step‑by‑step guides. Sell online, at farmer’s markets, and through local hardware stores; offer branded refill bundles and subscription reorders.
Hands‑On Workshops for Makers & Homeowners
Run paid workshops teaching basic maintenance: hinge and lock upkeep, bike tune‑ups, small engine lubrication and corrosion prevention. Participants pay for class and leave with a can and printed maintenance schedule—good for upselling product and building a local customer base for repeat purchases or repair referrals.
Marina / Boat Yard Supply & Lube Stations
Partner with marinas to supply branded cans and install self‑service lubrication stations at slips and work docks—target seasonal boaters who need quick anti‑corrosion treatments. Offer bulk pricing, contract refills, and on‑site service packages for high‑value clients.
E‑commerce Bundles for Specialty Trades
Create targeted e‑commerce bundles for tradespeople (locksmiths, carpenters, bike shops) that pair the lubricant with niche accessories (precision straw packs, cleaning wipes, applicator tips). Market via social ads and trade forums; include how‑to videos and reorder incentives to turn one‑time buyers into regular customers.
Creative
Rust‑Rescue Garden Sculpture
Salvage old metal pieces (grates, gears, chains) to build a layered garden sculpture, then use the spray to displace trapped moisture, free seized fasteners, and apply a clear protective film so the piece keeps its patina without continuing to corrode. The product's water‑resisting properties mean the sculpture can live outdoors year‑round with minimal upkeep.
Squeak‑Free Reclaimed Door
Upcycle a barn or closet door into a focal point by restoring its hardware—soak hinges, rollers and latch mechanisms with the lubricant to stop squeaks and reduce friction, then reassemble and finish the wood. The aerosol's adjustable nozzle helps reach hinge pins and track rollers inside tight cavities for a professional, smooth operation.
Weatherproof Wind Chimes & Kinetic Mobile
Create wind chimes or a kinetic mobile from mixed metals, keys and found hardware; after assembly, spray each moving joint and connection to prevent rust, reduce noise from metal‑on‑metal clatter, and keep motion smooth. Because the lubricant is safe on plastic and rubber, it can be used where cord, beads or spacers are involved without damage.
Bicycle Restoration & Display
Restore a vintage bicycle as a functional art piece—use the lubricant to free stuck derailleurs, lube chains and cable housings, and remove grime from nuts and bolts. The non‑conductive, surface‑safe formula lets you treat components without risking electrical parts (lights, electronic gear) and prepares the bike for display or sale.
Antique Tool Revival
Collect old hand tools at flea markets and revive them for use or decor: penetrate and loosen rusted pivots, protect blades and joints with the clear film, and polish for a preserved, working look. The lubricant prolongs tool life and makes them safe to handle while preserving original finishes.