MolaKule
Staff member
How could you judge an oil's performance by looking at 2 elements in a VOA? How do you know what types of Boron or MoDTC compounds are incorporated in an additive package?I could tell by Moly and Boron count.
How could you judge an oil's performance by looking at 2 elements in a VOA? How do you know what types of Boron or MoDTC compounds are incorporated in an additive package?I could tell by Moly and Boron count.
I never said I could judge performance. I said I could tell you if it would be considered "boutique". Any Moly between 65 and 85 is Tri and anything over 300 is not. Boron will shift between brands but ALL boutique will have a PPM over 250.How could you judge an oil's performance by looking at 2 elements in a VOA? How do you know what types of Boron or MoDTC compounds are incorporated in an additive package?
The difference is that Mobil Super sells for literally half the price of Amsoil OE.That's what Mobil 1 says to every customer that buys their Full Synthetic Super named oil. No difference.
And OE is a better formulated oil.The difference is that Mobil Super sells for literally half the price of Amsoil OE.
Will a car that lasts 200,000 miles in daily driving conditions and has routine oil changes at regular intervals have a noticeably different experience running Amsoil OE instead of Mobil Super Full Synthetic?And OE is a better formulated oil.
With a much lower HTHS, higher NOACK and weaker base stock.The difference is that Mobil Super sells for literally half the price of Amsoil OE.
Don't know. Never tried it. However, my money spent to my piece of mind is not wasted. Only I can say I am wasting my money and where I place my trust.Will a car that lasts 200,000 miles in daily driving conditions and has routine oil changes at regular intervals have a noticeably different experience running Amsoil OE instead of Mobil Super Full Synthetic?
Something tells me that for a daily driver it really doesn't matter.With a much lower HTHS, higher NOACK and weaker base stock.
I never said I could judge performance. I said I could tell you if it would be considered "boutique". Any Moly between 65 and 85 is Tri and anything over 300 is not. Boron will shift between brands but ALL boutique will have a PPM over 250.
Than Super yes Sir but don’t forget there’s a plain vanilla Mobil Synthetic (not to be confused with Mobil 1). Or are they the same just marketed differently? Now I’m confusedAnd OE is a better formulated oil.
Let's all stop with a cold PBR and Supertech. Cars still running fine in 5 years and we still arguingThan Super yes Sir but don’t forget there’s a plain vanilla Mobil Synthetic (not to be confused with Mobil 1). Or are they the same just marketed differently? Now I’m confused![]()
Will a car that lasts 200,000 miles in daily driving conditions and has routine oil changes at regular intervals have a noticeably different experience running Amsoil OE instead of Mobil Super Full Synthetic?
https://blog.amsoil.com/what-amsoil...0nJ5a2fgpy-Fx39CKsJwBYaRjT67HAmRoCQjEQAvD_BwEI'm not wrapped up either, same here. I'm just against products that ride the coattails of a reputation and charge out the nose for just the name and perception.
I don't see how any of us win when we cave to buying an oil like that. If anything, that sets a precedent that more oils can be up-charging us for merely perceived benefits. No thanks.
Yes, the engine running Amsoil should be cleaner so it would likely consume less oil and get better MPGWill a car that lasts 200,000 miles in daily driving conditions and has routine oil changes at regular intervals have a noticeably different experience running Amsoil OE instead of Mobil Super Full Synthetic?
You would need two identical engines running an identical amount of hours in identical conditions and to tear them both down at a prescribed time to ever prove that.Yes, the engine running Amsoil should be cleaner so it would likely consume less oil and get better MPG
You would need two identical engines running an identical amount of hours in identical conditions and to tear them both down at a prescribed time to ever prove that.
The reality is that many cars are running basic "just meets the spec" blends from quicklubes and run fine all the way through their existence. Oil burning is usually related to a design flaw or poor maintenance such as a PCV that needs replacement.