Hi All,
I have a Nissan Versa with the MR18DE engine. It is quite famous for having early failures due to piston slap, and I've got my short block replaced under warranty due to it.
Anyways, my engine started making the piston slap noise again (only when cold and under load), the only change was that I switched to synthetic (I was using Valvoline conventional before).
Checking the oil composition, I noticed the main difference was sodium and moly content (valvoline has sodium and no moly).
So, as an experiment, I did the following:
1 - Removed the synthetic (Mobil 1) and re-filled with Valvoline conventional
2 - Noted that the piston slap noise is gone (it didn't go away right away, took a couple of drives)
3 - Added a bottle of MOS2 to valvoline oil - piston slap noise came back
So, if you have one of these [censored] Nissan engines that are prone to slapping, I'd recommend staying away from MOS2, and Valvoline seems to be the better suited oil.
The block only got 5k km on it, and hopefully I have not caused any permanent damage by using MOS2 on it.
I have a Nissan Versa with the MR18DE engine. It is quite famous for having early failures due to piston slap, and I've got my short block replaced under warranty due to it.
Anyways, my engine started making the piston slap noise again (only when cold and under load), the only change was that I switched to synthetic (I was using Valvoline conventional before).
Checking the oil composition, I noticed the main difference was sodium and moly content (valvoline has sodium and no moly).
So, as an experiment, I did the following:
1 - Removed the synthetic (Mobil 1) and re-filled with Valvoline conventional
2 - Noted that the piston slap noise is gone (it didn't go away right away, took a couple of drives)
3 - Added a bottle of MOS2 to valvoline oil - piston slap noise came back
So, if you have one of these [censored] Nissan engines that are prone to slapping, I'd recommend staying away from MOS2, and Valvoline seems to be the better suited oil.
The block only got 5k km on it, and hopefully I have not caused any permanent damage by using MOS2 on it.