2014 Honda odyssey 158.6k mi // HPL ppcmo 0w20 5.3k mi.

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2014 Honda odyssey. Short run of HPL (first change to HPL). First analysis for this engine. Aside from a longer drain interval, anything outstanding you notice?

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Wear looks great and TBN very strong. The oil is now a 30 grade though. Without TAN and oxidation value it's hard to say. 15.33% change in cSt is a lot in just 5k miles. Not really sure. Run it again. Could be some cleaning going on. I’d ask BS labs to re-run viscosity.
 
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Wear looks great and TBN very strong. The oil is now a 30 grade though. Without TAN and oxidation value it's hard to say. 15.33% change in cSt is a lot in just 5k miles. Not really sure. Run it again. Could be some cleaning going on. I’d ask BS labs to re-run viscosity.
Re run viscosity on next UOA, or with current sample?
 
I wouldn’t even waste my time having Blackstone rerun viscosity. It’s not low, even with obvious fuel (395* flashpoint). HPL has told us multiple times that their oils are intentionally using the known properties of oils to “work thicken” in order to help offset fuel dilution. Thick(er) oil has never been an issue for any engine short of sludge (and we know that’s simply not going to happen with HPL @ 5.5k miles).

Do the smart thing next UOA, and use a different lab that uses gas chromatography to measure fuel content. I’d say shoot for a 7.5k UOA on your next sample, and try WearCheck in NC or Polaris Labs in Indianapolis, or even TestOil (but they’re super $).
 
I believe so yeah. Around that.

Oxidation is something you don't want to see. It's as bad or worse than thinning. Oxidation is what leads to varnish, deposits etc.
Maybe it’s simply the nature of this blend. There is enough to combat the process to sludge; even with the oxidative thickening. We’ve seen this with HPL UOAs in several very long OCIs posted. As @SubieRubyRoo highlighted above BUT I do agree this much thickening in just 5k IS worth asking why.
 
Maybe it’s simply the nature of this blend. There is enough to combat the process to sludge; even with the oxidative thickening. We’ve seen this with HPL UOAs in several very long OCIs posted. As @SubieRubyRoo highlighted above BUT I do agree this much thickening in just 5k IS worth asking why.
Definitely. I removed my comments because I wasn't suggesting HPL would have this problem. It's loaded with detergents and high solvency base oil so in this case it's a non-issue. But for lesser quality oils I'd be a bit more concerned. But I would expect a premium oil to maintain its grade.
 
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this 3.5L (j series?) Honda engine is supposedly known for sludge given the variable cylinder management stuff. I am hopeful the HPL is cleaning some of this crap out. I’ve used amsoil SS before but switched recently to this stuff.
 
this 3.5L (j series?) Honda engine is supposedly known for sludge given the variable cylinder management stuff. I am hopeful the HPL is cleaning some of this crap out. I’ve used amsoil SS before but switched recently to this stuff.
If you used Amsoil SS before there should be nothing at all left to clean up. Was this engine run on Amsoil for a while or just one interval?
 
this 3.5L (j series?) Honda engine is supposedly known for sludge given the variable cylinder management stuff. I am hopeful the HPL is cleaning some of this crap out. I’ve used amsoil SS before but switched recently to this stuff.
More varnish/lacquer than sludge, due to the heat.
 
HPL has told us multiple times that their oils are intentionally using the known properties of oils to “work thicken” in order to help offset fuel dilution.
This is a situation where you probably shouldn't oversimplify the explanation. HPL oils are simply very shear stable and as a result, "typical fuel dilution" will not be sufficient to mask the inherent thickening of oils as they age.
 
this 3.5L (j series?) Honda engine is supposedly known for sludge given the variable cylinder management stuff. I am hopeful the HPL is cleaning some of this crap out. I’ve used amsoil SS before but switched recently to this stuff.
Not the newer ones. Check out the photos I recently posted in the Passenger Car oil section.
 
Viscosity has increased as others & BS noted. Good news is the Honda seems to be showing low contaminates. Frankly quite low for the universal averages. Cu way down as an example. Agree w/ @buster to re-run the viscosity test on this sample to double check. See what happens on the next oil drain interval. Thanks for sharing this UOA on your Odyssey.
 
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