Originally Posted By: TiredTrucker
Who really cares what the difference is between conventional and synthetic, as it pertains to cleanliness of the engine internals of this thread? It is the detergent package in the oil that handles that, not the base oil. Even the best synthetic base oil, without a good additive package, will grenade an engine just as quickly. There is a lot more to motor oil than the base oil. Motor oil is a highly developed blend of many components. Detergents, Acid neutralizers, anti friction components, extreme pressure modifiers, oxidation control, viscosity modifiers, ethanol emulsion protection, etc. Even a top end synthetic base oil, by itself, can't mitigate all of what is going on in an engine. It needs help via the additive package. That is what makes a oil a API SN, ILSAC GF-5, API CJ-4, dexos1, or whatever spec it is made for.
There was a time when "synthetic" generally means a PAO/ester blend, and the base oil was well known for resisting breakdown, and esters were very good at cleaning out deposits. It can't do it by itself, but it was a good starting point for clean internals. However, at this point I think a performance standard means more than what's essentially just a marketing term now. "Synthetic" kind of became more marketing-speak than anything else once Castrol started using group III and selling it as "synthetic" and when Valvoline started marketing all these different SynPower products as "synthetic" including fuel treatments and brake fluid, even though technically all brake fluid and fuel detergents are synthesized chemicals.
Of course there are always these odd outliers. Just look up Mobil's foray into aviation motor oils with Mobil AV-1. They ended up pulling it off the market because it had issues with leaded gasoline in certain engines.