Long, but worth reading!

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PART 1:
Today's topic seams to be motor oil related. I am a NASA Engineer at
Marshal Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. My field of work is
Tribology which is the study of friction, wear, and lubrication. In our
spare time, our group collects and tests different motor oils using the
Shell Four Ball tester. This tester tests the extreme pressure properties
of oils. These areas in a motor are cam to lifter contacts, valve stem to
guild, and piston skirts. Over the years we have found synthetic bases oils
to out perform mineral based oils by a large margin. We test the oils new,
after 1000 miles, 2000 miles, and up to 10,000 miles. In a nut shell, we
found that synthetic oils have better wear properties after being run 10,000
miles then mineral grade oils new. Which synthetic do we use? First any
you will benefit from any synthetic, but we use Mobil 1. Mobil by far puts
more research dollars in motor oils then any other company. They are also
aggressive in racing.
Other notes on motor oils.

Do not run a multi grade oil (10w-30) more then 1000 to 2000 miles -
depending on your driving habits.
This is because a 10w30 oil starts its life as a 10 weight oil and large
polymer chains are added to get the 30 rating. These chains break down very
quickly which produces small chains with an open electron charge at the
ends. These ends attract grim and form sludge.

Do not run synthetics in a new rebuild. A new engine needs the added
friction allowed by mineral oils to set the rings properly. Chevy found
this out on the corvette. These cars came from the factory with Mobil 1 and
owners brought them back because of smoking and oil consumption (rings did
not seat). Run a good single weight oil for the first 2000 miles. We found
Havaline 30 to be a good mineral oil - in fact we use it for our standard.

The reason Mobil 1 can safely be run for 10,000 miles is because the
additive package is well engineered to isolate grim and hold it in
suspension. This also is why Mobil 1 is expensive. You know - you get what
you pay for.

I know there are a lot of questions on motor oils. You can e-mail me for
more information or search the web for more details on synthetics. Your
Roadster deserves the best - run synthetic oils.

Phil Hall

Part 2:

I listed multi grade oil break down at 1000 to 2000 miles. This is for the
junk oils found at circle K for a dollar. A good name brand oil will last
3000 miles without too much break down. This is for mineral grade oils -
synthetic oils meet government viscosity tests for ratings without adding
thickeners like polymer chains.

Guys here at work run synthetics in motors that have 140,000 to 170,000
miles on them without any more oil consumption them normal. I believe that
you will get a slight increase in consumption in older motors because the
synthetic are very slippery and can get by old rings easier. In these cases
going to a 15w-50 may help, but this is not a reason not to use synthetics.
Older motors need the extra protection. At running temperature a synthetic
will maintain its viscosity, where a mineral oil viscosity is DRASTICALLY
REDUCED.

A test on how well synthetics work at different temperature can be done in
your home. Get a quart of your favorite mineral oil and a quart of a
synthetic. Put a cup a each oil in a glass or paper cup and stick in the
freezer over night. In the morning try and pour the oils out. Next test:
DO THIS OUTSIDE. On an old camp stove put a ¼ of the synthetic oil in an
old frying pan and put it on the stove on the highest heat setting. Cook
for 30 minutes. Now cook your oil for 30 minutes. At this point you will
see why you cooked the synthetic first. As the oil cooks pour some out to
see the changes in viscosity between the oils.

Part 3 on oil additive coming soon. I need to back to NASA work.

Phil Hall

Part 3:

The question of change intervals and synthetic oil has come up. As a side
at work we run oil tests using the Shell Four Ball test rig. This tester
was developed by Shell oil to test the extreme wear properties of motor oils
- cams, piston skirts etc. It consists of three, = inch balls held in a
triangular pattern in a cup with oil heated to 165 degrees. A forth ball is
lowered to the center of the three balls and loaded to 40 KG. The ball is
then rotated 600 RPM for one hour. After the test the wear scar is measured
on the three stationary balls. The bigger the scar the lower the extreme
wear property of the oil is. We use Havoline 30 wt for a base line. We use
this oil because engineers from the past liked this oil, so we have a large
data base.

Looking at data shows new Havoline 30 wt has a wear scar of .0165 inches.
New Mobil 1 has a .0145 inch scar. May not seem like a lot of difference,
but it is. Havoline 30 at 3000 miles has a wear scar of .020 inches and
Mobil 1 at 4000 miles has a .0164 scar. Remember - the bigger the badder.
3000 miles is as long as anyone was willing to run Havoline 30 wt, so its
data stops here. Mobil 1 at 6000 miles is .0167, at 8000 miles is .0188,
and at 10,000 miles is .0194. So, at 10,000 miles Mobil 1 has better
lubrication properties in the critical areas in your motor then a good 30
wt. All mineral oils follow Havoline pretty close - major brands. Some off
brands have a .020 wear scar new. Multi-grades generally have a larger wear
scar as well. This data was from a 5.0 Ford Mustang. Every motor will be
slightly different, but not much.

So, synthetic can handle long run intervals. But, that is part of the
story. You have contaminates to deal with. This is where the additive
package comes in play. This is the expensive part of oils and the reason
synthetics are high priced. Because of the long run intervals of synthetic,
they must have a vastly superior additive package - and they do. Proof of
this is to take 3000 mile dino oil and look at it in a glass jar - then do
the same for Mobil 1. The Mobil 1 will look new compared to the dino oil.
I run Mobil 1 in my new cars to the longest manufactures oil change interval
- usually 7000 miles. This will keep the warranty happy. In my Roadster I
change it once a year regardless of mileage. It run my Roadster about 5000
miles a year. Most people at work run synthetics and do the same. We have
a bunch of cars in the lot that have over 200,000 miles on them and going
strong. I (my wife) never keeps one that long.

I run 10w-30 Mobil 1 in my new Roadster motors (after break-in). Older
motors get 15w-50 because the tolerances are larger. Because synthetics
don't thin down like mineral oils do at temperature, I would be careful
running 15w-50 in a motor with a high volume oil pump. By doing so you may
run into cavitation problems - oil gage jumping wildly. Drag racers
experience this often at high RPM. Drop a wt and it will clear up.

I checked the auto parts stores last night and could not find a zero wt
Mobil 1. It was about 2 years ago they were talking introducing this oil,
so apparently they have in some markets. I stand corrected.

Testing another "magic" oil additive today. It looks and smells like
linseed oil! This should be fun. Additives are another subject all
together. Another day, but never tested a good one - none- zip - zero -
don't waste your money.

Sorry for being soo long. I like synthetics (obviously). If you have been
to the conferences, seen all the tests and data, and read the lubrication
journals you would run nothing other then synthetics.

Phil

Fond this here: http://forums.yellowworld.org/archive/index.php/t-1136.html
 
Quote:


Today's topic seams to be motor oil related. I am a NASA Engineer




Yes it seams to be that this man needs to learn grade 4 spelling.

This guy seems bogus bigtime. And it seems he is endorsing Mobil 1
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Quote:


PART 1:
Looking at data shows new Havoline 30 wt has a wear scar of .0165 inches.
New Mobil 1 has a .0145 inch scar. May not seem like a lot of difference,
but it is. Havoline 30 at 3000 miles has a wear scar of .020 inches and
Mobil 1 at 4000 miles has a .0164 scar. Remember - the bigger the badder.





Straight Havoline 30wt is non-synthetic. Why are you comparing a dino to Mobil-1 synthetic in this scar test???
 
This wasn't all that correct in 2002 when it was written. "Do not run a multi grade oil (10w-30) more then 1000 to 2000 miles - "
depending on your driving habits.
He later states "I listed multi grade oil break down at 1000 to 2000 miles. This is for the
junk oils found at circle K for a dollar. A good name brand oil will last
3000 miles without too much break down." I don't see anything new here except an exaggeration in the opening paragraph and any oil meeting SM(post 2002) regardless of price or name will do 3k without blinking. This article just doesn't relate to modern formulation and I also don't think that the 4 ball test gives a good representation of engine wear.
 
What's going on this weekend? So many junky repost of garbage??

Ignorance may sometimes be bliss but here on BITOG, properly backed/cited and referenced postings are golden and knowledgeable posters like Gary Allan, Molakule, Terry from Dyson labs, etc. offers insights that you wouldn't get from many place else.

No wonder some senior BITOG guys got really upset over time and decided to leave .......
 
To my knowledge, there aren't any places on the internet that are overall better than BITOG. So wherever these folks are going after they quit here, it's a step downward.
 
Bogus alert!

The name of the center in Huntsville is Marshall with two l's. An engineer working there should know this well. Oh yes, seeing "grim" for grime tickled me too. Also, no papers specifically about motor oil, additives, etc., from Marshall or with this guy's name on them show on the NASA technical reports server at /NTRS.NASA.gov>.

The condensed version:
liar.gif
 
Quote:


Looking at data shows new Havoline 30 wt has a wear scar of .0165 inches.
New Mobil 1 has a .0145 inch scar. May not seem like a lot of difference,
but it is. Havoline 30 at 3000 miles has a wear scar of .020 inches and
Mobil 1 at 4000 miles has a .0164 scar. Remember - the bigger the badder.
3000 miles is as long as anyone was willing to run Havoline 30 wt, so its
data stops here. Mobil 1 at 6000 miles is .0167, at 8000 miles is .0188,
and at 10,000 miles is .0194. So, at 10,000 miles Mobil 1 has better
lubrication properties in the critical areas in your motor then a good 30
wt. All mineral oils follow Havoline pretty close - major brands. Some off
brands have a .020 wear scar new. Multi-grades generally have a larger wear
scar as well. This data was from a 5.0 Ford Mustang. Every motor will be
slightly different, but not much.




most retarded test ever.

As the scar increases size, the amount of pressure over the contact area is reduced dramatically, one it "levels off" to a scar size large enough for the oil to create a barrier between the balls, the wear levels off. The wrong conclusions were drawn BIG TIME. the only conclusion that CAN be drawn was that once the scar size got to around 0.15 or so in both tests, things started to level off, but conveniently, they didn't "test" beyond 3,000 miles on the mineral oil to show the trend for both.

The conclusion I would draw from that test is that mineral oil required the pressure to be spread over about 50% more surface area to build a film. Which makes since because the synthetic oil molecules are more uniform and would be able to be "drawn" between the balls and form a barrier a little easier under these particular circumstances..

the 4 ball test is nothing more than a test that reveals that the more uniform structure of synthetic stocks can build a barrier somewhat better than a mineral oil.. but does it in such a way, as to exaggerate the differences more dramatically.

I do believe synthetic oil is better, but I do not believe the 4 ball test is the way to prove it.
 
Oh Lord....this guy works on the Space Shuttle!?

Quote:


A test on how well synthetics work at different temperature can be done in
your home. Get a quart of your favorite mineral oil and a quart of a
synthetic. Put a cup a each oil in a glass or paper cup and stick in the
freezer over night. In the morning try and pour the oils out. Next test:
DO THIS OUTSIDE. On an old camp stove put a ¼ of the synthetic oil in an
old frying pan and put it on the stove on the highest heat setting. Cook
for 30 minutes. Now cook your oil for 30 minutes. At this point you will
see why you cooked the synthetic first. As the oil cooks pour some out to
see the changes in viscosity between the oils.




Wasn't this a Mobil 1 commercial a few years back?
 
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Quote:


Long, but worth reading!




In what way?




Agree. What a load.
crazy.gif


Quote:


Get a quart of your favorite mineral oil and a quart of a
synthetic. Put a cup a each oil in a glass or paper cup and stick in the
freezer over night. In the morning try and pour the oils out.




Been there, done that. No difference @ -10f in my freezer. Both conventional and syn looked and poured fine.

*IF* this guy is a Rocket Scientist, boy are we in trouble..
smirk.gif


Bill
patriot.gif
 
This guy must have gotten demoted from the external tank foam and solid rocket booster o-ring departments.

Houston, we have a problem.
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Hey this is garbage. Probably very old as well. Amazing how much bogus information there is out there on just the subject of oil alone
 
This guy states that he workes in Huntsville, Al., but he
lists his address as Los Angeles?

That's one heck of a commute.

Maybe he moved (or got fired).
 
Quote:


This guy states that he workes in Huntsville, Al., but he lists his address as Los Angeles?





I think the guy posting is not the same guy that authored the article. I think he just pasted it from another group.
 
Quote:


PART 1:
Do not run a multi grade oil (10w-30) more then 1000 to 2000 miles -
depending on your driving habits.





I should follow this guys advice over the recommendation of my auto manufacturer that built the engine in my car and knows what it will run best on? It seems that running single grade oils would actually do more harm doesn't it, since they have poorer flow characteristics when cold?
crushedcar.gif
 
Dave424, why would you cut and paste some guy's opinion from a message that's 5 years old and think it's relevant?
 
Long and worth dispatching. . .

From G-Man: I'll just add that if this guy works for NASA no wonder the space program is in the shape it's in.
smirk.gif
 
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