Nice!
It’s pretty easy to find 0w16. Easily found online and I’ve see it anywhere there is oil. But never seen 0w8 - where the heck do you get it?
Nice!
It’s pretty easy to find 0w16. Easily found online and I’ve see it anywhere there is oil. But never seen 0w8 - where the heck do you get it?
Cool.
I am blown away by this UOA! I doubt a single API SP licensed ILSAC 6A or 6B motor oil has a starting TBN greater than 8.5. The HPL PP PCMO has a TBN of 9.29 after nearly 17K miles.A TBN of > 9 at 16,000 miles is outstanding.
I have never spoken to a lubricant manufacturer as open to discussing their products as @High Performance Lubricants. I am glad I have found them. They are awesome.HPL is really impressive.![]()
Thanks to Dave at HPL for being so open and transparent too with regard to oil questions about the brand.
Yes, they are. How is your fuel mileage in the Corolla on HPL PP 0W-8? We got a 2020 Sonata that gets 44 highway / 28 city MPG on 0W-20. It will get HPL pretty soon.I am sure you and I can agree that HPL has impressive products, across the full range of oil grades and formulas.
MPG is a little better than EPA 35+ mpg.I am blown away by this UOA! I doubt a single API SP licensed ILSAC 6A or 6B motor oil has a starting TBN greater than 8.5. The HPL PP PCMO has a TBN of 9.29 after nearly 17K miles.
I purchased the 0W-20 version of this oil and the driveline fluids for our Jeep and posted my initial reaction after receiving my packages here: https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/t...ited-ups-just-dropped-off-the-packages.355350.
Yes, I still had a few questions. I was expecting good oil, in line with other performance lubricants. I wanted to make sure that it was good stuff. I never expected it to be this good! The Jeep is a brand new vehicle, and it's been my wife's dream car forever, and now we finally got it. The UOA just blew me away and got me all fired up. Due to work, I did not have time to change fluids, and the Jeep had just passed 1100 miles. However, I will do so ASAP and post about it when I do.
I have never spoken to a lubricant manufacturer as open to discussing their products as @High Performance Lubricants. I am glad I have found them. They are awesome.
Yes, they are. How is your fuel mileage in the Corolla on HPL PP 0W-8? We got a 2020 Sonata that gets 44 highway / 28 city MPG on 0W-20. It will get HPL pretty soon.
Pretty well. However, if you want to do extended drains regularly, I would do an oil analysis every 5K miles to establish how far you should push it. It also depends on how badly your TGDI engine fuel dilutes the engine oil.I wonder how HPL would handle a small TGDI engine for extended interval![]()
Because you do not understand what a UOA shows and what it does not show, nor how the machinery works which produces the analysis.And why wouldn't an abnormal "contamination" induce some abnormal "wear"? Wear numbers shown here are ridiculously low for such mileage.
Assuredly, there was no stabbing around in the dark here.Man, 3k OCI then right into the extended drains. I couldn't do it but clearly the UOA implies there is no issue. Bravo!
Fair enough, i'm here to learn anyway. I just wanted to ask if a "Silicon value" that high was normal for an engine with 19k miles.Because you do not understand what a UOA shows and what it does not show, nor how the machinery works which produces the analysis.
I understand your confidence in such a great lube manufacturer but what about your warranty and the 10k OCI that Toyota recommends?As always YMMV and caveat emptor.
As the driving conditions here have proven to be favorable, no warranty claims are anticipated at all. My confidence in HPL grows. Let's see how the future UOAs look.I understand your confidence in such a great lube manufacturer but what about your warranty and the 10k OCI that Toyota recommends?
The silicon result is likely a combination of a few things. 1, defoamer which will make up under 10 ppm. 2, would be a combination of actual dirt (based on good wear rates I would suspect this to be relatively low) and likely the largest part would be material leaching from sealants being a new vehicle. There is not a raw material other than the defoamer showing up here. What will likely happen is the silicon on future sample data will fall off to eventually be a combination of a little defoamer and actual dirt. This is certainly one of the reasons trends are so important on UOA.Fair enough, i'm here to learn anyway. I just wanted to ask if a "Silicon value" that high was normal for an engine with 19k miles.
Many thanks for all the first-hand informations.The silicon result is likely a combination of a few things. 1, defoamer which will make up under 10 ppm. 2, would be a combination of actual dirt (based on good wear rates I would suspect this to be relatively low) and likely the largest part would be material leaching from sealants being a new vehicle. There is not a raw material other than the defoamer showing up here. What will likely happen is the silicon on future sample data will fall off to eventually be a combination of a little defoamer and actual dirt. This is certainly one of the reasons trends are so important on UOA.
We do light oils pretty well. I have no reason to expect anything other than this serving Direct_Rejection well.
David