Thank you. Good news is that due to a BITOG member very recently sending M1 5W-30 ESP, I will be testing that next. I have also been testing some HPL oils since late 2024, but I have not been posting the results for several reasons.If you're taking suggestions, it would be interesting to see how the Mobil ESP line stacks up against these oils. Cheers!
Looking forward to those results. I have some M1 ESP 0W-30 if needed for comparison.Thank you. Good news is that due to a BITOG member very recently sending M1 5W-30 ESP, I will be testing that next. I have also been testing some HPL oils since late 2024, but I have not been posting the results for several reasons.
That would great. Thank you. Perfect testing companion to its 5W-30 brother. Please let me know if you need my address again.Looking forward to those results. I have some M1 ESP 0W-30 if needed for comparison.
Great! I've been using 5w-30 ESP in all of my vehicles as of late, so I really look forward to hearing about it.Thank you. Good news is that due to a BITOG member very recently sending M1 5W-30 ESP, I will be testing that next. I have also been testing some HPL oils since late 2024, but I have not been posting the results for several reasons.
After ending the test, I poured virgin oil into each cup and they sat until this morning. I stirred the mixtures, then drained the oils. The two M1 oils have a lot of insolubles left behind, while QS Ultimate Durability 10W-30 has almost none. The pictures are not as revealing as my eyes are. M1 0W-40 FS has roughly twice as much insolubles volume as M1 5W-40 FS does. The difference in amount of insolubles between the two M1 oils and QS UD is huge. I did not include a picture of D1 5W-40 ESP because it was not tested as long as the others, but the amount of insolubles is similar to what QS UD’s cup has.
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Do you think that the low volatility offsets the use of lower quality base oils (frequent but not ubiquitously) used in 10W-30 formulations?Good 10W-30 synthetic oils do tend to have very little VII or even none and the base oils are relatively viscous, which leads to low volatility. M1 10W-30 EP probably has fairly low volatility but I expect it to be considerably higher than QS UD 10W-30. Same is true for almost every oil. That QS oil has crazy low volatility. Sadly it is extinct. QS UD became QS UP, and they don’t make it in 10W-30. QS UP oils do have very low volatility for their viscosity grades. I tested some of them and have a thread about it.
That would be great. I already have PP Euro 5W-40 and have not tested it yet. I would really appreciate getting the other two. I’ll send you a PM with my address. Thanks!I will send you ESP X4 0W-40, PP Euro 5W-40, or even a bottle of BMW 10W-60 if you’re interested in testing any of them in this way again.
Primarily Group I based oils have pretty much or entirely gone extinct. For primarily Group II based oils, in a moderate enough climate, I would certainly prefer 10W-30 to 5W-30. I consider Group III to be fairly high or very high (if GTL) quality, so do not mind if synthetic Oil X in 10W-30 uses more Group III than synthetic Oil X in 5W-30, if the 10W-30 is less volatile. I want Noack values below 10%. I also want low consumption and have experienced oils with lower volatility having higher oil consumption. Low volatility with high consumption defeats the purpose. I try to minimize oil transport through PCV system and the deposit-forming nature of burning oil that got above the top ring. Misting is a separate process from evaporation, so even a magical zero volatility oil would still end up in the PCV system. That’s frustrating. Good question that was obviously impossible for me to answer concisely.Do you think that the low volatility offsets the use of lower quality base oils (frequent but not ubiquitously) used in 10W-30 formulations?
How much of oil do you need? I have some Motul 300V 5W40 racing oil. Maybe would be interesting to see how it performs against street oils.That would be great. I already have PP Euro 5W-40 and have not tested it yet. I would really appreciate getting the other two. I’ll send you a PM with my address. Thanks!
That would be very interesting. I don’t need much of each oil, since one test uses only 1 ounce. We don’t want to cut it too close, though. The volume of a Chap Stick is roughly what to shoot for. More quantitatively, 10 ml is a good amount. That allows for multiple tests, if needed.How much of oil do you need? I have some Motul 300V 5W40 racing oil. Maybe would be interesting to see how it performs against street oils.
I will send you, just DM address.That would be very interesting. I don’t need much of each oil, since one test uses only 1 ounce. We don’t want to cut it too close, though. The volume of a Chap Stick is roughly what to shoot for. More quantitatively, 10 ml is a good amount. That allows for multiple tests, if needed.