Thats what I don't understand. At this point, I really don't care. Kind of tired of the subject. If it's wear, it's wear. It is not significant at all, although I'd want the lowest possible. Labs never flag Fe as high with any oils on here that we see.quote:
But could someone clue me as to where the "M1 = high iron" comes from after looking at that data?
I'd guess M1 might look worse in an American V8 with all their pushods and marginally lubed areas. No way for me to know and also no way to tell if it's because of it being thin or something else...
Here's a recent thread with a table Bryanccfshr compiled comparing a few different oils in Toyota engines -quote:
Originally posted by 1sttruck:
I thought the last 'high Fe in Mobil 1 (PCMO)' thread noted that in 'high iron content' engines, with metal timing chains, etc., resulted in higher Fe than in 'low iron content' engines, such as with aluminum blocks, heads, timing belts, etc., and that Mobil 1 seemed to generate more Fe than some other oils in the same 'high iron' engines.
Maybe the noise generated by an engine is just moved around the frequency spectrum by different oils? A particular oil may move the noise into or out of the hearing range of humans or a particular human. I'd have to see an instrumented measurement of sufficient sensitivity to give any credence to this type of subjective evaluation.quote:
Originally posted by wtd:
This is one of the reasons I quit using Mobil 1. The 5.7L in my 98 chevy truck was noisy when using this oil, especially after the engine was hot.
Hmmm...you and I should start a marketing firm. Let's target Castrol as our first customer.quote:
Originally posted by Gary Allan:
[qbLubroharmonics ...lubroresonance ..hmmm..these could be some catchy terms here..[/qb]![]()
I gotta agree..anything hammering away can't be good...quote:
Originally posted by Gary in Sandy Eggo:
Original Question: Noiser Engine = More Wear or Just More Annoying?
Reply: As a general rule, more noise equates to more wear with just about everything.
Regards, Gary in Sandy Eggo
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* reductions of 3db in independant laboratory tests