Originally Posted By: tig1
What engines have you torn down that used Mobil 1? What was their condition?
I'm not the one you directed that question at, but FWIW I did a re-gasket on my wife's former 1993 Chrysler 3.5L (first-gen) v6 a couple of years ago. We recently sold it with 257,000 on the clock, and at the time I did the re-gasket it had about 225,000 on it. I ran it on Mobil 1 10w30 from the time it had about 15,000 miles onward. The internals were very clean- not even any yellowish discoloration on the top end. Visible head casting material was still white/silver aluminum, iron parts were still grey/black, wear areas silver, cams were spotless. Even the casting areas directly atop the exhaust ports were not yellowed as I've seen on many engines and older non-synthetic oils. On the bottom end- same story. Looking at the cylinder walls there was no scoring or glazing, and the factory honing cross-hatch was still visible. Tempted as I was, I didn't pop off a bearing cap to take a look there since oil pressure was still fine, and I wasn't planning to keep it long enough to bother rolling in new bearing shells even if they were worn out. Oil consumption was about 1 quart per 5k miles when we sold it last fall.
I'm not saying that it wouldn't have been just the same on another oil, just a single data point- nothing to draw a "trend" through, that's for sure! One thing that has been in Mobil 1's favor, at least for me, is that they've been around a long time. Many oils on the market now (eg. PP) didn't even exist when we bought that car. The other side of the coin is that the Mobil 1 10w30 I started that car on in 1993 was a different substance from the last batch I poured into it in 2008. Would it have performed the same if it had run its entire life on 2008-vintage Mobil 1? Who knows. Oils change a heck of a lot faster than I wear out engines, so drawing meaningful conclusions about today's oil from engine longevity is dicey at best.
What engines have you torn down that used Mobil 1? What was their condition?
I'm not the one you directed that question at, but FWIW I did a re-gasket on my wife's former 1993 Chrysler 3.5L (first-gen) v6 a couple of years ago. We recently sold it with 257,000 on the clock, and at the time I did the re-gasket it had about 225,000 on it. I ran it on Mobil 1 10w30 from the time it had about 15,000 miles onward. The internals were very clean- not even any yellowish discoloration on the top end. Visible head casting material was still white/silver aluminum, iron parts were still grey/black, wear areas silver, cams were spotless. Even the casting areas directly atop the exhaust ports were not yellowed as I've seen on many engines and older non-synthetic oils. On the bottom end- same story. Looking at the cylinder walls there was no scoring or glazing, and the factory honing cross-hatch was still visible. Tempted as I was, I didn't pop off a bearing cap to take a look there since oil pressure was still fine, and I wasn't planning to keep it long enough to bother rolling in new bearing shells even if they were worn out. Oil consumption was about 1 quart per 5k miles when we sold it last fall.
I'm not saying that it wouldn't have been just the same on another oil, just a single data point- nothing to draw a "trend" through, that's for sure! One thing that has been in Mobil 1's favor, at least for me, is that they've been around a long time. Many oils on the market now (eg. PP) didn't even exist when we bought that car. The other side of the coin is that the Mobil 1 10w30 I started that car on in 1993 was a different substance from the last batch I poured into it in 2008. Would it have performed the same if it had run its entire life on 2008-vintage Mobil 1? Who knows. Oils change a heck of a lot faster than I wear out engines, so drawing meaningful conclusions about today's oil from engine longevity is dicey at best.
Last edited: