I ordered a new spikes t2 buffer but I would never ever put grease in a area on my firearm that’s designed to run dry. Putting grease in the buffer tube will only cause problems down the road. It maybe a quick fix but grease isn’t suppose to be in there.There are two things that make noise. One of the first thing I resolved with my first AR. The buffer ( the piece that sets inside the front of the spring ) has weighted balls And the spring. To get rid of that horrid sproing noise take the buffer spring complete out and coat the spring with bearing grease. If you want to get technical Mobil28 is mil-spec grease. Do not get to liberal with the grease or your gun won't cycle when it real good out. That also lubricates the inside. Option two is to buy a spikes buffer. They use tungsten dust to dampen the chatter of the weighted balls. They are just big bearings and can make s hell of a rack with cheap buffers. I usually opt for the Spikes adj. stock kit. One it has the nice quiet buffer and two the buffer tube is coated with dry film. It cut down on wear and makes for a real quiet and smooth action when charging the weapon. A lot of kits have sprirl groves from machining inside the buffer tube and that makes a different racket itself. Go to a gun shop that has Spikes buffers. Shake it back and forth and it's virtually silent. Do those two things and it will quite your gun down emmensely. If you want to invest in the Spikes kit it will sound like a completely different unit. The buffer alone in is 24 to 29 dollars. The complete kit cost around 79 dollars. Follow these procedures and you will illiminate the pesky racket.
