OVERKILL
$100 Site Donor 2021
Mobil 1, particularly in the tri-syn era, contained both esters and AN's, both of which clean. This was also during an era when the performance standards for engine oils were much lower than they are now.How does this keep getting repeated?!?!
I WAS THERE. In the 80s, switching to Mobil 1, 10w-30 almost instantly wiped out main seals and dumped oil everywhere. I always knew this going in, and always just replaced the main seals when oil started leaking all over the place, after a hundred miles or so. It was the price I expected to pay, to run those older design motors out past 200,000 miles, which was far less commonplace then. Being a lot younger, I didn't mind getting greasy, getting under the car, and replacing seals. Seals were a lot easier to get to in those days too, in fact a lot of cars were designed so the main seals could be replaced in an hour.
But Mobil1 made engines leak, period. Anyone saying anything contrary just goes to show what a heaping pile the internet has become. Dead internet is real, AOL starting endless summer was just the beginning.
So, if you had an engine that was run on the conventional swill of the era, it likely contained considerable deposits, which also worked as dams that blocked leaks. Switching to an oil with a base oil blend that dissolved these deposits would very quickly reveal these leaks. This is why just replacing the seal/gasket would resolve the issue and it wouldn't come back, because the issue wasn't in fact caused by the oil, simply revealed by it.