This is the first UOA on the first oil change since I bought the Discovery in March '09. I had the water pump replaced before taking delivery of it after reviewing its entire maintenance history (previous owner decided to trade it in for a new Land Rover rather than fix it). However, since taking it home, I've had a small problem with it losing coolant (Dexcool) and have had to replace about 1/2 gallon over the approx. 3700 miles I've put on it (street duty with one weekend spent in the Utah desert). Given the problems with head and valley gaskets on the 4.6L Rover V8 and that I couldn't find any obvious coolant leaks at the time I changed the oil, I thought sending a sample to Blackstone would be a good idea. I didn't see any obvious signs of coolant in the oil when I drained it.
The oil in it previously was "dealer mystery oil". I haven't called their service department yet to see what type of oil they normally use. However, I have seen a Valvoline sticker on one of their shop trucks.
I used a M1 oil filter and the air filter is an OEM Land Rover filter.
Numbers in parenthesis are the universal averages for this motor.
Comment: Universal averages show typical wear levels for this type of engine after about 3200 miles on the oil. The oil in your Land Rover was run only 100 miles longer than average. Wear metals (see aluminum, iron, copper) are a touch high but not enough to cause concern. The elevated sodium is a possible sign of antifreeze in the oil. But sodium could also be residual additive from a past-use oil, and in this case it's harmless. Change the oil at 3000 miles and resample to monitor. The TBN was 3.6, showing plenty of active additives left in this engine oil.
Miles on oil: 3,339
Miles on unit: 57,724
Months in service: 10
Make up oil added: 0 qt
ALUMINUM: 6 (5)
CHROMIUM: 2 (1)
IRON: 18 (12)
COPPER: 7 (4)
LEAD: 4 (7)
TIN: 5 (4)
MOLYBDENUM: 74 (61)
NICKEL: 1 (3)
MANGANESE: 1 (0)
SILVER: 0 (0)
TITANIUM: 0 (0)
POTASSIUM: 5 (2)
BORON: 110 (33)
SILICON: 18 (12)
SODIUM: 61 (15)
CALCIUM: 2702 (2379)
MAGNESIUM: 16 (106)
PHOSPHORUS: 797 (913)
ZINC: 962 (1135)
BARIUM: 0 (0)
cSt Viscosity @ 100°C: 13.80
SUS Viscosity @ 210°F: 73.2
Flashpoint in °F: 405
Fuel %: Antifreeze %: ?
Water %: 0.0
Insolubles %: 0.3
TBN: 3.6
Since sending in this sample, I've found a small coolant leak at the hose feeding the water pump. I'm hoping that is the sole source of the coolant loss (and not causing the higher sodium levels), but I'm planning to have another sample run at 3000 miles, which I'll probably just pull from the dip stick tube. The rate I'm going, that could be another 10 months from now...
The oil in it previously was "dealer mystery oil". I haven't called their service department yet to see what type of oil they normally use. However, I have seen a Valvoline sticker on one of their shop trucks.
I used a M1 oil filter and the air filter is an OEM Land Rover filter.
Numbers in parenthesis are the universal averages for this motor.
Comment: Universal averages show typical wear levels for this type of engine after about 3200 miles on the oil. The oil in your Land Rover was run only 100 miles longer than average. Wear metals (see aluminum, iron, copper) are a touch high but not enough to cause concern. The elevated sodium is a possible sign of antifreeze in the oil. But sodium could also be residual additive from a past-use oil, and in this case it's harmless. Change the oil at 3000 miles and resample to monitor. The TBN was 3.6, showing plenty of active additives left in this engine oil.
Miles on oil: 3,339
Miles on unit: 57,724
Months in service: 10
Make up oil added: 0 qt
ALUMINUM: 6 (5)
CHROMIUM: 2 (1)
IRON: 18 (12)
COPPER: 7 (4)
LEAD: 4 (7)
TIN: 5 (4)
MOLYBDENUM: 74 (61)
NICKEL: 1 (3)
MANGANESE: 1 (0)
SILVER: 0 (0)
TITANIUM: 0 (0)
POTASSIUM: 5 (2)
BORON: 110 (33)
SILICON: 18 (12)
SODIUM: 61 (15)
CALCIUM: 2702 (2379)
MAGNESIUM: 16 (106)
PHOSPHORUS: 797 (913)
ZINC: 962 (1135)
BARIUM: 0 (0)
cSt Viscosity @ 100°C: 13.80
SUS Viscosity @ 210°F: 73.2
Flashpoint in °F: 405
Fuel %: Antifreeze %: ?
Water %: 0.0
Insolubles %: 0.3
TBN: 3.6
Since sending in this sample, I've found a small coolant leak at the hose feeding the water pump. I'm hoping that is the sole source of the coolant loss (and not causing the higher sodium levels), but I'm planning to have another sample run at 3000 miles, which I'll probably just pull from the dip stick tube. The rate I'm going, that could be another 10 months from now...