I think Too Slick makes a cogent argument.
The interpretation of the UOA would have to be rooted deeply in the knowledge of the engine and circumstances from which the oil came--as well as of the particular oil at hand.
High iron on one engine may mean nothing; in another it could be sounding the death knell. What may look like high silicone in a particular drain may actually have been part of the original oil recipe--one would have to know that. And oil recipes are a swiftly moving target these days--are they not?
With a good data base of what is to be expected from a given engine and a given oil, a better idea of what is going on could be had. Tall order, certainly. Pert near impossible order.
Norfolk Southern railroad uses Gulf oil (yeah, they still make it) in their locomotive engines, and they use UOA's to decide when to change the oil. They're using the same oil in the same basic engine designs, so they obviously have a firm data base for accurate interpretation of the results.
We see the "universal averages" column on most UOA's. I assume this is the average for all engines. Am I wrong?
If that is indeed the average for all engines, that's an almost useless number in my opinion. Further, it wouldn't take into consideration all oils either, some of which may have some of those elements built into the formula (as alluded to earlier).
All of this tends to point up even more the amount of talent (augmented by data specific to the engine and oil at hand) which must go into the proper interpretation of a UOA.
Perhaps we tend to over-simplify things.
When looking over UOA's at this forum and others like it, we often have little or no equal comparisons from which to draw conclusions.
After considering this issue carefully, I don't think UOA's are pointless--I just think that the proper interpretation of the UOA is a much deeper science than many of us (certainly me) have heretofore thought.
Dan
The interpretation of the UOA would have to be rooted deeply in the knowledge of the engine and circumstances from which the oil came--as well as of the particular oil at hand.
High iron on one engine may mean nothing; in another it could be sounding the death knell. What may look like high silicone in a particular drain may actually have been part of the original oil recipe--one would have to know that. And oil recipes are a swiftly moving target these days--are they not?

With a good data base of what is to be expected from a given engine and a given oil, a better idea of what is going on could be had. Tall order, certainly. Pert near impossible order.
Norfolk Southern railroad uses Gulf oil (yeah, they still make it) in their locomotive engines, and they use UOA's to decide when to change the oil. They're using the same oil in the same basic engine designs, so they obviously have a firm data base for accurate interpretation of the results.
We see the "universal averages" column on most UOA's. I assume this is the average for all engines. Am I wrong?
If that is indeed the average for all engines, that's an almost useless number in my opinion. Further, it wouldn't take into consideration all oils either, some of which may have some of those elements built into the formula (as alluded to earlier).
All of this tends to point up even more the amount of talent (augmented by data specific to the engine and oil at hand) which must go into the proper interpretation of a UOA.
Perhaps we tend to over-simplify things.
When looking over UOA's at this forum and others like it, we often have little or no equal comparisons from which to draw conclusions.
After considering this issue carefully, I don't think UOA's are pointless--I just think that the proper interpretation of the UOA is a much deeper science than many of us (certainly me) have heretofore thought.
Dan