I can't see the benefits in this application for a turntable at all. The best lubricant for this purpose, a turntable bearing, is per the manufacturers recommendation and care to use oil with zero additives. Many of these additives were/are designed to fill the void of scratches in engine blocks so piston rings can be even more efficient at their purpose. Inverted bearings, such as Michell's have a slight rifling to carry lubricant to the bearings fulcrum point then allowed to drain and replenish a flow back down the shaft. Minimizing that small rifling groove in any way , even the smallest amount when it see's a design as a flaw and attempts to fill it would most certainly reduce the designs effectiveness. It's , to me anyway, as wrong as those who tell others to replace bearings with far harder ceramic bearings in designs that are purposely made to make the bearing the wear point , not the shafts top. One requires the ball removed cleaned and replaced so it hits a new place of contact , the other may require a whole new bearing from damaging the top of the shaft where the ball sits. As usual , the same tired argument made by want to be experts that the company only did it to make more profits is used. Things are made at a cost without argument , however a product well established and with a specific design, then altered to defeat those specific's, is a poor specific users choice , in my humble view , for what its worth...…………..