My experience with fuel dilution and burn off is that it does not happen to a satisfactory degree to mitigate the problem. See the attached VOA's. Sample number 7 was done immediately after a one stop, 100 mile each way trip. Reduction, but not elimination. And it would immediately return after 'normal' usage (10 mile commute). Even after an oil change (sample 9) followed by a one mile drive it was unacceptably diluted in my mind. And look at sample 10 after that same 100-mile-each-way-with-one-stop trip. Got tired of fighting Mercedes-Benz and got rid of the car. Same story with a previously owned '11 3.0L General Motors High Feature V6.
My theory was that none of the manufactures run the oil hot enough to evaporate all the gas constituents that will in fact evaporate. This theory may be somewhat supported with the current vehicle ('17 Jeep Grand Cherokee 3.6L Pentastar V6 with MPI - not DI) which has an oil temperature display. Oil temperature rarely gets to 200*F. Normally hovers between 185* and 195* depending on outside temperature and usage stress. I suppose this is done in order to be able to extend oil interval changes and maybe so that the actual viscosity at operating temperature will remain acceptable (especially when 0W-20 is specified)?
Oh, the gas chromatography is, in my opinion, the only way to get an accurate fuel dilution number. Forget about the flash point interpretation. Got the testing to convince myself of that.


My theory was that none of the manufactures run the oil hot enough to evaporate all the gas constituents that will in fact evaporate. This theory may be somewhat supported with the current vehicle ('17 Jeep Grand Cherokee 3.6L Pentastar V6 with MPI - not DI) which has an oil temperature display. Oil temperature rarely gets to 200*F. Normally hovers between 185* and 195* depending on outside temperature and usage stress. I suppose this is done in order to be able to extend oil interval changes and maybe so that the actual viscosity at operating temperature will remain acceptable (especially when 0W-20 is specified)?
Oh, the gas chromatography is, in my opinion, the only way to get an accurate fuel dilution number. Forget about the flash point interpretation. Got the testing to convince myself of that.


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