Reply from Mobil 1 concerning basestocks

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My thoughts are M1 started to include mineral oils back during the conversion to GF-3. The Seq VIB fuel economy test that was part of that category and which is part of the GF-4 catergory (with higher limits) is a difficult test to pass but is almost impossible with all PAO based formulations. This is a result of the test being very sensitive to viscosity. PAO's are great in passing all the other tests in the GF-3/GF-4 category but because of their inherint high VI, they are at a disadvantage in the Seq VIB. To pass this test you need to blend an oil near the bottom HTHS limit of the SAE J300 viscosity classification, ie a 5W-20 does better down at 2.6-2.7cP and a 5W-30 does better at 2.9-3.0cP. The problem with all PAO formulations is that you can't make a 5W-30 down at 2.9-3.0 cP, it turns out as a 0W-30 because of the very good low temp properties (CCS). So to be able to market a 5W-30 Mobil 1 XOM likely had to add something with poor low temp (CCS) properties (like AN or mineral oil) so they could blend at a low HTHS and keep from falling out of grade into a 0W.

This is likely one reason that Redline doesn't have the GF-4 starburst on the bottle, because they decided not lower the quality of their product to meet some artificial fuel economy test.




Wow.
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OK, i can accept this explanation but i can't forgive them in the PAO propaganda and increased price.
 
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Well don't keep us in the dark G-man, why do you disagree?




You can't be serious. What he wrote about the Seq VIB test and PAO is a bunch of baloney, IMO.
 
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My thoughts are M1 started to include mineral oils back during the conversion to GF-3. The Seq VIB fuel economy test that was part of that category and which is part of the GF-4 catergory (with higher limits) is a difficult test to pass but is almost impossible with all PAO based formulations. This is a result of the test being very sensitive to viscosity. PAO's are great in passing all the other tests in the GF-3/GF-4 category but because of their inherint high VI, they are at a disadvantage in the Seq VIB. To pass this test you need to blend an oil near the bottom HTHS limit of the SAE J300 viscosity classification, ie a 5W-20 does better down at 2.6-2.7cP and a 5W-30 does better at 2.9-3.0cP. The problem with all PAO formulations is that you can't make a 5W-30 down at 2.9-3.0 cP, it turns out as a 0W-30 because of the very good low temp properties (CCS). So to be able to market a 5W-30 Mobil 1 XOM likely had to add something with poor low temp (CCS) properties (like AN or mineral oil) so they could blend at a low HTHS and keep from falling out of grade into a 0W.

This is likely one reason that Redline doesn't have the GF-4 starburst on the bottle, because they decided not lower the quality of their product to meet some artificial fuel economy test.




Dude, save the Ecstasy for raves.
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Here's one of the earliest SuperSyn formulas (circa 2002):

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So much misinformation, so little time. A PAO formulated oil is actually the oil to beat in the fuel economy sequence. That is the standard of economy that other oils are measured against.
 
I was serious b/c I don't live and breathe oil to the extint many of you do. You didn't agree and I wanted to know why. So I could possibly learn something...a la the original mission of bitog.... Now I know! Thanks!
 
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My thoughts are M1 started to include mineral oils back during the conversion to GF-3. The Seq VIB fuel economy test that was part of that category and which is part of the GF-4 catergory (with higher limits) is a difficult test to pass but is almost impossible with all PAO based formulations. This is a result of the test being very sensitive to viscosity. PAO's are great in passing all the other tests in the GF-3/GF-4 category but because of their inherint high VI, they are at a disadvantage in the Seq VIB. To pass this test you need to blend an oil near the bottom HTHS limit of the SAE J300 viscosity classification, ie a 5W-20 does better down at 2.6-2.7cP and a 5W-30 does better at 2.9-3.0cP. The problem with all PAO formulations is that you can't make a 5W-30 down at 2.9-3.0 cP, it turns out as a 0W-30 because of the very good low temp properties (CCS). So to be able to market a 5W-30 Mobil 1 XOM likely had to add something with poor low temp (CCS) properties (like AN or mineral oil) so they could blend at a low HTHS and keep from falling out of grade into a 0W.

This is likely one reason that Redline doesn't have the GF-4 starburst on the bottle, because they decided not lower the quality of their product to meet some artificial fuel economy test.




ummm, correct me if i am wrong but GF4 oils have nothing to do with fuel economy but all about decreasing the ZDDP for prolonging the life of a catalytic converter.
 
over a year ago - when i first found this site and first learned about basestock classification - I smelled a rat with M1. the product marketer in me did not believe Mobil would sell a superior and more costly product at the same price (and hence lower profit margin) as the other brand name GIII synthetics. no company is that nice. so I posed a naive question/statement about M1/GIII to the BITOG community and was promptly set straight

of course i suspected regular M1 was GIII and the EP was still PAO. now we find out the more expensive stuff is mostly GIII. that's even more shady IMHO.
 
That was pre Katrina when oil companies got a pass on their formulations. I suspect this is when M1 got cheapened. No one noticed so why change back when it met spec. other than self respect and honest marketing.
 
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That was pre Katrina when oil companies got a pass on their formulations. I suspect this is when M1 got cheapened. No one noticed so why change back when it met spec. other than self respect and honest marketing.




but in the other thread Tom mentioned a sample from 12/04 showing only small amounts of PAO and more mineral - this way before katrina.
 
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over a year ago - when i first found this site and first learned about basestock classification - I smelled a rat with M1. the product marketer in me did not believe Mobil would sell a superior and more costly product at the same price (and hence lower profit margin) as the other brand name GIII synthetics. no company is that nice. so I posed a naive question/statement about M1/GIII to the BITOG community and was promptly set straight

of course i suspected regular M1 was GIII and the EP was still PAO. now we find out the more expensive stuff is mostly GIII. that's even more shady IMHO.




Kudos & good call.
 
On second thought the 15W50 doesn't have to meet any fuel economy standard and it is group III....
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