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- May 31, 2024
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According to Jason - this oil is designed to help. Do you buy the sales pitch in this infomercial?He has a problem with fuel dilution. What oil will help this?
According to Jason - this oil is designed to help. Do you buy the sales pitch in this infomercial?He has a problem with fuel dilution. What oil will help this?
According to Jason - this oil is designed to help. Do you buy the sales pitch in this infomercial?
Yes and not all of the compounds in gasoline burn off, but it does seem that better oils are more resistant to viscosity loss.I buy that for the most part, fuel dilution is mixing a low-viscosity fluid with one of a higher viscosity. This is independent of brand or type or grade, you're mechanically diluting the oil. No oil resists this better than another.
However, there is also potential damage to the VM by fuel, so there can be a more permanent viscosity loss even if the fuel is partially removed. This is dependent on the quality and type of VM the blender is using.
But to look at a UOA that shows fuel and claim that a particular brand resists mechanical dilution? No.
Due to what? Better VM resisting permanent shear loss?Yes and not all of the compounds in gasoline burn off, but it does seem that better oils are more resistant to viscosity loss.
I don't know. Just looking at the data (UOAs). Above my knowledge base.Due to what? Better VM resisting permanent shear loss?
Excellent post. Still there are plenty of people who see a difference of 10 or 20 ppm of iron for a 10K run between different oils in their engine and come to the conclusion that the oil with 10 or 20 ppm less iron is the better oil. Then assume their engine is going to last longer with that oil.UOAs aren't good for comparing wear between different oils. UOAs test the serviceability of the oil. After 100,000 miles of 2 oils (of very different quality and/or viscosity) in identical engines with identical use, both could show consistent 1 ppm/1k miles, but one of them could have far more piston deposits, ring coking, blow-by, oil consumption, seal degradation/leaks, sludge, and varnish than the other. It could also have higher wear that won't show up in UOAs because of the range of particle size the ICP captures and some wear metals getting trapped in carbonaceous deposits as they form. Factors like magnets and bypass filters will skew results.
UOAs also cannot determine the source of wear. Copper could be bearing wear or could just merely be chelation from an oil cooler or brass fitting. Iron could be wear from rings, valvetrain, crank journals, etc... or could be from rust of an iron block. Other forms of analysis like ferrous spectroscopy could better determine these things but now you're getting well outside the scope (and cost) of a UOA.
The only way you can accurately measure wear between 2 oils is with extensively controlled conditions on a dyno with before and after measurements with a profilometer for peaks and valleys on metal surfaces (particularly cylinder walls and rings), adcole machine for measuring cam wear down to a millionth of a inch, and so on. Simulation testing like Te-77 and SRV can give a good idea of that oil's performance, alongside rust, copper corrosion, and other tests.
Boy, that must be super fun when it's cold then, right?LSJ said in a recent YT video that oils thicker than manufacturers recomendation may be too thick for the piston rings to properly remove it from the cylinder-walls. That can result in enough oil getting into the combustion to cause problems such as fouled spark-plugs, damaged catalytic converters, and LSPI.
Engines are more complicated than meets the eye. Changing one thing can have several effects that were not initially thought about.
Seems opposite when engines will typically decrease oil consumption when thicker oil is used. Fouled plugs would mean lots of oil consuption.LSJ said in a recent YT video that oils thicker than manufacturers recomendation may be too thick for the piston rings to properly remove it from the cylinder-walls. That can result in enough oil getting into the combustion to cause problems such as fouled spark-plugs, damaged catalytic converters, and LSPI.
That, and: Winter.Seems opposite when engines will typically decrease oil consumption when thicker oil is used. Fouled plugs would mean lots of oil consuption.
Smoke just pouring out the exhaust pipe.Boy, that must be super fun when it's cold then, right?
LSJ said in a recent YT video that oils thicker than manufacturers recomendation may be too thick for the piston rings to properly remove it from the cylinder-walls. That can result in enough oil getting into the combustion to cause problems such as fouled spark-plugs, damaged catalytic converters, and LSPI.
Engines are more complicated than meets the eye. Changing one thing can have several effects that were not initially thought about.
Boy, that must be super fun when it's cold then, right?