Originally Posted By: Jim Allen
Originally Posted By: Jax_RX8
I would disagree, I would suggest that the addition of the MMO helped hold the wear numbers well below the universal averages through the cleaning, anti-wear, and friction reduction it is know for.
My 2 cents.
Your financial contribution notwithstanding, Jax, the jury is still out (the jury being another UOA of straight Rotella) whether the MMO did anything more than the R-T could have done on it's own. It's highly speculative to make statements either way. I really don't have a horse in this race. If MMO helped here, great! If not, then we know.
I still have not been able to find the viscosity of MMO. I found what it's made from on another post.
I seem to "know" that the viscosity of MMO is 5, but I can't remember where I first heard that. I am quite certain that I got that from an authoritative source at some time in the last 40 years, though.
My familiarity with automotive matters stems from the fact that three generations of my family ran automobile service places in my home town - from the time my grandfather opened his auto garage before WWI until a cousin closed his transmission shop when he retired a few years ago - and I worked in my father's shop in the 1960s before I left to study engineering in college and never went back. It is "in my blood" to tinker with cars, I guess you could say, and I always remember having some MMO around.
MMO is, and always has been, good stuff for what it is good for. The concept of using it in a crankcase for an entire OCI at 20% as recommended by the MMO company is a new one on me, though. I intend to follow through with a couple of more OCIs on this same engine to get to the truth. If the truth is that it is better to run it in a good sound engine than to just run a quality synthetic, that will seem weird to me too. I want to know, though.