I figured that I would make this question "public" on this forum...since many of us members still might be under the impression that "synthetic is always best"... but YOU have had real world experience in your duramax with dino HDEO's with stellar results..since joining this forum and also viewing you and "Arkapigs" used oil analysis in your duramax pickups's with even 10w30 oils in these engines...I have been quite surprised just how well these oils performed! But I want you if you could to cover some topics that most "synthetic" oil manufacturers claim is reason to spend the extra dollars for their synthetic oil over their conventional oils...
From what I have learned from you dave is that the ONLY two benefits a "synthetic" oil is good enough to spend the extra cash for whether be a group 3,4,or 5, is pour point/cold starting... should you live in a region cold enough for this...AND extended drain intervals...way beyond a typical OLM change notification around 9-11,000 miles which duramax engines often reach. I also have been educated by you on the "candle theory" regarding heat in which if you pass your finger through a candle very quickly...you will not get burned..hence the argument for "synthetic being able to handle heat better" than dino counterparts...and if I understand that theory correctly....as long as any engine regardless of being turbo,diesel or gas...as long as adequate flow and pressure is present..then any oil will do? So other then the top two reason's that you gave me about cold starting, and extended intervals...are us BITOG members missing anything else that a synthetic could offer? Companies like redline claim their group 5 oils offer excellent protection against engines which run very high oil temps....and others claim "cleaner engines" and more MPG with their synthetics. Please educate me and many other members on here dave. Thanks! -PONCHO
From what I have learned from you dave is that the ONLY two benefits a "synthetic" oil is good enough to spend the extra cash for whether be a group 3,4,or 5, is pour point/cold starting... should you live in a region cold enough for this...AND extended drain intervals...way beyond a typical OLM change notification around 9-11,000 miles which duramax engines often reach. I also have been educated by you on the "candle theory" regarding heat in which if you pass your finger through a candle very quickly...you will not get burned..hence the argument for "synthetic being able to handle heat better" than dino counterparts...and if I understand that theory correctly....as long as any engine regardless of being turbo,diesel or gas...as long as adequate flow and pressure is present..then any oil will do? So other then the top two reason's that you gave me about cold starting, and extended intervals...are us BITOG members missing anything else that a synthetic could offer? Companies like redline claim their group 5 oils offer excellent protection against engines which run very high oil temps....and others claim "cleaner engines" and more MPG with their synthetics. Please educate me and many other members on here dave. Thanks! -PONCHO