I will never use those two words contained within quotes ever again on this forum.This site used to BAN talk of "best oil". Absolute truth in both ways.

I will never use those two words contained within quotes ever again on this forum.This site used to BAN talk of "best oil". Absolute truth in both ways.
Aroma refers to the smells derived directly from the base stocks, while bouquet refers to the smells that develop during the oil's refinement and aging process. I find my Kirkland oil to have a nice leathery bouquet with a hint of anise. Not that my engines care.Seriously? We're judging lubes on aroma now?
Show me a license, VOA or UOA that includes a sniff test and then I'll give a crap ...
I’d have to disagree with this statement. I’ve seen cleanliness differences in 5k mile oci’s nevermind 20k miles. Like I mentioned earlier I will be posting results of this by year end when the clean up is complete. The fact that ESP is cleaning up what cheaper oil left behind in the same exact driving conditions at the same exact intervals says something. Not all oils are the same despite approvals.For a 20k miles or shorter interval, I don't think we will observe a significant difference between Kirkland, Supertech, Pennzoil, Mobil1 ESP, or Amsoil Signature. Especially, if all of them are rated 20k miles oil.
100% agree-I’ll never buy a car used as a rental.I rented a Toyota Camry, turbo engine, for a cross country trip. 48,000 miles on the odometer and 12k miles since its last oil change. I was sorely tempted to get an oil change, but resisted, and it survived. I understand the feeling. Also, will never buy a car used as a rental for this reason.
I've used Super Tech HMFS 5W-30 for years. I have noticed that it has a petroleum smell which reminds me I'm adding oil (not water) to the crank case LOL. I prefer oil having a smell.As long as the Supertech, Kirkland, Amazon basic oil has the same spec or approval, they are more less the same with the enxpensive oil. I feel pitty to people who overspent on overprice engine oil that mainly marketing, not measurable scientific data.
The difference between super expensive PAO oil and HC synthetic maybe observed if one do 40k miles OCI. With 10-20k OCI, I think there will be no difference.
I used Supertech for more than a decade, it works perfectly. I did 5-8k miles OCI.
I run the "cheap" supertech all year round. Works fine for me.I run cheap supertech in the summer. Over winter/cold wet months I put in expensive boutique oils so I dont have to climb under the car when its wet and miserable.
To add to this. Even within group 3 base stocks there’s different quality/performance. Not to mention other ingredients like viscosity modifiers. IMO the more severe the service the more quality base stocks/ingredients matter.I’d have to disagree with this statement. I’ve seen cleanliness differences in 5k mile oci’s nevermind 20k miles. Like I mentioned earlier I will be posting results of this by year end when the clean up is complete. The fact that ESP is cleaning up what cheaper oil left behind in the same exact driving conditions at the same exact intervals says something. Not all oils are the same despite approvals.
I came into these forums in May of 2002, the same day Bob Winters established it. I don' recall a ban talk on the subject of "Best Oils". Of course, I fully understand there really is NO ONE Best Oil out there.This site used to BAN talk of "best oil". Absolute truth in both ways.
It wasn’t under Bob it was when Tony was running the site. I’m not exactly sure of the date. 2008ish??I came into these forums in May of 2002, the same day Bob Winters established it. I don' recall a ban talk on the subject of "Best Oils". Of course, I fully understand there really is NO ONE Best Oil out there.
My redline and HPL oils do much better with oxidation and TBN numbers once you go past 8k miles.I've used Super Tech HMFS 5W-30 for years. I have noticed that it has a petroleum smell which reminds me I'm adding oil (not water) to the crank case LOL. I prefer oil having a smell.
I run the "cheap" supertech all year round. Works fine for me.
After 4 decades of car ownership I've come to the conclusion that oil brand doesn't matter, only the spec the oil meets matters.
So I try to use the lowest priced oil that meets the specification.
With SuperTech, you get the added bonus that it meets the Dexos 1 Gen 3 spec, and it has a strong additive package with generous amounts of phosphorous / zinc anti-wear additives, and calcium (detergent) additives.
The only thing I'm not sure about with Super Tech High Mileage Full Synthetic is whether it treats the oil seals to help prevent oil leaks.
It doesn't explicitly say that on the container. Other oils like Quaker state and Pennzoil explicitly say that it treats the oil seals right on the container.
This version of the forum came about in May 2002, I joined on that first day actually and Bob asked me to join the staff almost immediately. Prior to that I was on Bob’s original website where he had a chat portion that was set up much like an old newsgroup format. I believe that I had found that in 2001. I don’t think Tony took over this site until sometime after 2005It wasn’t under Bob it was when Tony was running the site. I’m not exactly sure of the date. 2008ish??
Why did you have to rejoin? I think I started in 2001. But the dates got goobered
There are 2 schools of thought - on what is best for the long term health of an engine.My redline and HPL oils do much better with oxidation and TBN numbers once you go past 8k miles.
Ehh. I mean I get that but today is a very different world technologically.There are 2 schools of thought - on what is best for the long term health of an engine.
[1] Some people prefer 5k mile / 6 month (whichever comes first) OCI with any Dexos 1 Gen 3 Group III full synthetic oil.
[2] Other's prefer extended oil changes with a Group V Ester based oil like HPL or Redline or a Group IV PAO based oil such as Amsoil.
Both ways may have the same end result after 300,000 miles. Both ideas above are valid paths. Each of us can choose the one that is right for our situation.
I agree this works for most. But replace any Dexos 1 Gen 3 synthetic with R&P in method [1] for 99% coverage. Method [2] covers everything including severe service but not fuel dilutors.There are 2 schools of thought - on what is best for the long term health of an engine.
[1] Some people prefer 5k mile / 6 month (whichever comes first) OCI with any Dexos 1 Gen 3 Group III full synthetic oil.
[2] Other's prefer extended oil changes with a Group V Ester based oil like HPL or Redline or a Group IV PAO based oil such as Amsoil.
Both ways may have the same end result after 300,000 miles. Both ideas above are valid paths. Each of us can choose the one that is right for our situation.
Is that the stuff they put in gear oil?Smell isn't indicative of refinement. It's from an additive.
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Dare ya to open one of these.
Yes, I agree. I think Valvoline Restore & Protect at 5k mile / 6 month OCI (whichever comes first) from 0 miles to 300,000 miles, and it might be the winner of all other strategies. You would get the cleanest engine with likely not even a drop of oil burning. Buying it at Walmart and using the $5 rebate per 5 quart container, and it might also be one of the least expensive oil change strategies.I agree this works for most. But replace any Dexos 1 Gen 3 synthetic with R&P in method [1] for 99% coverage. Method [2] covers everything including severe service but not fuel dilutors.