quote:
Originally posted by nick778:
Quad, I find what you are saying interesting. So that I am confident I understand what you are asserting, can you confirm or comment on what I think, as summarized below, you have said in this thread.
1) Using Dino vs. Synthetic oil really doesn't matter as far as extended drains relative to engine wear.
2) Using Dino vs Synthetic oil really doesn't matter as far as engine wear for a defined and consistent oil change interval (ie, the OEM's recommendation).
3) UOAs do not produce information that can be used or correlated with determining engine wear or assessing the quality of an oil related to factor like engine wear or suitability for entended drains.
4) Lastly, a question. Why do you use synthetic oil if you believe the above?....
ok, good fair questions....lemme answer, but first off...
syn oil (any maker) and non 'generic' dino oil, differ as I have said numerous times by 10% on average. (I even allow the syn oil blenders to claim 15% to salve their injuries) Product data sheets are avail online and I invite all to peruse them. So I dont believe, but rather *know* syn oil is therefore 10% better. In terms of wear, I dont care much about flash/fire points or pour points....those are other fish for other frying pans. I beleive PAO blends are far superior to polyol esters in car engines, simply because as people I have talked to from mobil or texaco have succinctly pointed out, jet engine oil is not exposed to combustion byproducts, air or moisture due to the construction of the jet engine itself...and jet engine oils are not compatible with car engine seals without a ton of extra additives*(1). Why handicap yourselves? In short, my faith for things technical is placed more on the engineers and less on the entrepaneurs with big vats and mixing spoons.
that said:
1) IF the syn oil is 10% better out of the bottle, I would expect its long-drain characteristics to behave similar. I however do not endorse long drains. AS I said, why handicap yourself? 'New oil' every 'xxxxx' miles is far better than 'acceptable oil with depleted additives and ever increasing solids loading' every 'xxxxx' miles. Thats just common sense. (id still like to see UOAs done on a dino engine right next to the syn engine, but that just makes too much sense and aint no way a syn oil company will EVER do that. 10% performance is 10% performance, but for a 300% price increase?)
2) true.
3) partially true. UOAs are wonderful at showing contaminants. But I still maintain they are poor at showing actual hard wear. A UOA can show if the oil is still 'in grade' but once again, Id like to see the dino oil tested right along side it. Im betting the 10% rule holds...cant get anyone to take me up on it tho - darn.
4) in the machines in which I use syn oil (at proper drain intervals of course) I was for the most part addressing specific items. Aside from the truck and one car which are lifelong syn*(2) I felt the 10% edge would be useful. Please note, thousands of V65s ran for decades without syn oil and didnt lose the cams, hundreds of thousands of ATVs run daily without syn oil, thru mud, thru sand and dont explode. Hundred of thousands of v8 inboard boats run long productive lives on single weight oils and get taken out by corrosion long before bearings spin.
FWIW, lubrication failures just dont occur anymore. Its that 10% edge. If you read carefully the claims in this thread, most of which I challenged, a little tooooo much faith is put in syn oil. This is misplaced.
*(1) = mobil is to my knowledge the ONLY oil
maker (not blender) that has pretty much done extreme long range testing and TTD testing on actual motors using their products pretty much 24x7 for the last 15 or so years. Granted they change the oil every simulated xxxx miles, but when you can run a 1/5th million-ish miles at rated power and have wear within service limits...that speaks volumes (again Id like to see a dino oil filled motor right next to it)
*(2) = I am utterly shocked about one thing. As mentioned before, in a short time, an extreme mileage Ford truck is getting a new motor, a truck with tracked maint all on syn oil. I would think the syn guys would be there with baited breath to find out just how clean the insides *do* look after a lifetime of heavy use. If the numbers come out as good as I predict they will, it certainly adds hard evidence to their claims on the next BBS.