Amsoil Synthetic Blend Engine Oils

The NOACK Test is done at 482 Degrees Fahrenheit, I have a big problem with this test, it is not realistic. I will do the Lawnmower thing; I aimed an Infrared Gun at the Spark Plug area on a Briggs engine and I got a temp reading of 300. I did a temp reading with a probe in the oil fill hole and only got a temp of 210. This is on an Air-cooled Engine with what I am talking about. This is not on a water-cooled engine, let's talk lawnmowers again. I have a neighbor with a Water-Cooled Engine on his mower that only has an oil temp of like 190 whereas with my air-cooled riding mower I have a temp of 220 with the Thermal Probe.

If the HTHS Test can be done at 300, let's do the NOACK Test at a more reasonable Number.
Certain parts of the engine get very hot, like the underside of the piston for example, the ring land areas. Oil is exposed to these parts. So in theory, a less volatile oil will be less likely to burn off and leave deposits in these areas. They're supposed to modify Noack because they were finding it doesn't correlate well with oil consumption, which quite a few people on this site have observed over the years.
 
The NOACK Test is done at 482 Degrees Fahrenheit, I have a big problem with this test, it is not realistic. I will do the Lawnmower thing; I aimed an Infrared Gun at the Spark Plug area on a Briggs engine and I got a temp reading of 300. I did a temp reading with a probe in the oil fill hole and only got a temp of 210. This is on an Air-cooled Engine with what I am talking about. This is not on a water-cooled engine, let's talk lawnmowers again. I have a neighbor with a Water-Cooled Engine on his mower that only has an oil temp of like 190 whereas with my air-cooled riding mower I have a temp of 220 with the Thermal Probe.

If the HTHS Test can be done at 300, let's do the NOACK Test at a more reasonable Number.
Hogwash. Heating oil in a coffee carafe on an electric burner is all the s c i e n c e we will ever need....
 
Just put it in my 2010 Crown Vic with 153k on it. I ran 2 5k changes with restore and protect and didn’t notice any changes (not that I thought I would) both oil filters were clean. Inside of the engine looks pretty clean from the oil fill hole so I’m guessing the department took care of it with regular changes. I’ll probably run the amsoil from here on out for 5k intervals.
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Not being D1G3 is a positive in my book. If your performance standard is D1G3 your bar is pretty low considering some syn blends are on the list. I have no skin in the game as I don’t use syn blend and could care less about dexos.

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Companies that sell a lot of oil to GM dealers and lube centers care about Dexos though. Pennzoil Gold came into existence when the Dexos requirement of a synthetic or syn-blend base stock was laid down.
A product was needed that didn't force installers to take a jump in cost from dino oil to synthetic for their customers needing Dexos spec oil. Gold split the difference. I had one dealer who was looking at a $100,000 annual oil cost increase. We cut that by more than half with Gold. We still lost him to the GM oil program a couple years later.
 
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