Originally Posted By: deven
Did you even read my comment. Let me make this clear, the wear witnessed on Mobil 1 was NORMAL as in it would be normal to use this oil and get 300,000+ miles. My comparison is solely this, Royal Purple oil race cars had little to no wear compared to Mobil 1 oils. Just because an oil shows a little wear DOESNT make it a bad oil it just makes it an oil. Even Royal Purple had wear just not enough to be able to be measurable by a micrometer. Now do I think Royal Purple is superior to Mobil 1? Absolutely by a long margin!
Of course I read your comment, did you read mine?
Point blank: If Royal Purple was REALLY better (and I'm sorry, but I can't help but consider your take on this biased) then why aren't Porsche, Mercedes, General Motors, BMW, Audi, Ferrari, Honda....etc using it in their race cars?
You'll find most of them use Mobil 1, Castrol or a SOPUS product (Ferrari).
Does Royal Purple own a refinery? Do they have the ability to develop additive packages, base oils and the like in-house? No? So doesn't that mean they are BUYING these products from Mobil, SOPUS, Lubrizol...etc? So I'm having a hard time following how a BLENDER, mixing base oils and additives from these companies, would be able to blend an oil that is superior than what comes from those companies. Do you follow? Exxon-Mobil is the world's largest producer of PAO, AN's and other chemicals. infineum, the joint venture additive supplier between XOM and SOPUS is one of the largest additive suppliers. These corporations have the ability to develop the BEST lubricants because they can do the entire process in-house and if they need to change a component, they can MAKE it. They aren't buying it from somebody else. There is no set list of additives and base oils that they are forced to choose from to blend their products, because they can develop whatever they need.
So do I believe Royal Purple is "better" than Mobil 1? No. They don't have the capacity to be better than Mobil 1. They don't have the budget, the resources or the ability to develop their own lubricant components. And they don't have the flexibility to make changes to their product's core components on the fly just by engineering something new.... Because they BUY their base oils and additive "packages" from these companies that you somehow construe as inferior.
ExxonMobil's revenue was 486 BILLION dollars in 2011.
Royal Dutch Shell's revenue was 368 BILLION dollars in 2011.
ExxonMobil probably made more money in the last 30 minutes than Royal Purple will make all year. If you honestly believe that Royal Purple has the CAPABILITY to "blend" an oil that is better than something ExxonMobil or SOPUS can ENGINEER, then I've got some prime waterfront property in Nigeria you might be interested in........
EDIT: Just to clarify: I'm not saying Royal Purple is a poor product in any way shape or form. I'm currently using their ATF. I'm saying they don't have the capability to blend a better lube than Mobil does.