So...
Is there any way to perhaps concentrate the possible paraffin "contaminates" in such lubs or would that vary too much from batch to batch and not provide a good indication of what an unknown lubricant is? (I need to determine what the lubricant is that is contaminating our product during the manufacturing process so we can know where to look for a problem as well as to know if we need to destroy the product or not.)
If that's the information you seek, then GC will only be small part of your analytical arsenal. If you know, and can obtain samples of, all the possible lubricant contaminants, you could run them through the GC and build up areference library, however lubricants vary from batch to batch, and even change signifciantly over a year. That's because the lubricants are made from base grades that are traded on the open market, and a base grade of 30/100 could come from different refineries, different crudes.
The chemical composition can vary a lot, as the critical properties are viscosity ( the first number is the viscosity at 40C, the second indicates how little it changes when heated to 100C, so higher is better ). At room temperature 30/100 is similar to olive oil, 650/75 is similar to treacle. Synthetic polymeric Additives are used that can take the second number over 200, ie the engine oil doesn't turn from treacle to olive as the engine warms up, but thins much less, and multigrade oils tend to have lots of such additives. Many formulated lubricants will have 10 or more added chemicals.
Because most base grades are produced by vacuum distillation and some sort of chemical/solvent refining, characterising lubricant base grades is usually performed by looking at the family properties ( aromatics, olefine, cycloparaffins, paraffins ), as well as the general distillation, viscosity, stability properties, and also the unwanted impurities such as sulphur, nitrogen.
However, for most purposes, lubricant base grades are merely organic solvents, and all the goodies are dissolved in it. For example, a gear oil without additives will chew 1mm/100km off the contact surfaces on a truck's differential - I've seen one, very unhappy owner

. So additives are added, usually at concentrations of 1 - 10 %, and formulated lubricants are often identified by examining the additives ( often organics containing sulphur, phosphorus, synthetic polymers, and metals ( eg zinc, magnesiun, calcium, boron ) etc.
The normal strategy is to use column chromatography or solvent extraction to separate out the lubricant additives from the base grade and contaminated product, and sometimes they will have a unique components that can be used to identify the contaminant. I'd suggest looking at a mxture of TLC, SPE, HPLC and GC if you want to characterise your lubricant contaminant, focussing initially on TLC with different spray reagents. Why? - because TLC with different sprays can show almost everything, not just what reaches the end of the column.
There are batch to batch variations, and the habit of oil companies is to continually change the formulations ( the same specalist additives often are used by serveral companies, one major global supplier of additives is Lubrizol ). Formulating lubricants is a very complex field ( very price sensitive ), and it's hard for end users to identify unknowns, that's why pharmaceutical and food industries specify just a few types, so they can quickly identify possible sources.
I'd strongly recommend discussing your needs with the technical section of the suppliers of the lubricants that your facility mainly uses. If you want to identify lubricants, you need to narrow down the choices, and they can help. If you want to play, first look up some of the literature, and start by separating the additives and base grades from your product, then look at which is best to characterise.
I'd suggest that mineral, semi-synthetic, or synthetic base grade will tell you you have a lubricant contaminant, but you'll need to look at the additives to find out the contaminant origin, unless you only have a few choices, and you've built a reference chromatogram library that is regularly updated.
Bruce Hamilton