Valvoline Restore and Protect

If it took oil "a min to be pumped around the engine"
would not the sump run dry?
It takes about a minute for all the oil volume to go once through the oil pump or does one cycle around the engine. Not that the oil goes around the engine and takes it a minute to return. The oil pick up never runs out of oil because it's submerged at all times.
The oil pan volume is larger than the volume of all oil passages around the engine combined, so there is always at least a quart or two in the oil pan. Most likely two or half the total oil volume.
 
I don't think he's trying to clean the piston. He's just running an experiment to see if Valvoline Restore and Protect will clean it up without the oil getting heated up to operating temp.
Hello,
Yes I fully understand his experiment,
I am offering some higher concentrate chemicals if he do wanted.
No confusion. Thnx
 
It takes about a minute for all the oil volume to go once through the oil pump or does one cycle around the engine
but at a conservative 2000rpm which is what my engine warms up at..
its pumping multiple gallons per min.. with a 1.25gal sump. so your reasoning seems inaccurate.
 
but at a conservative 2000rpm which is what my engine warms up at..
its pumping multiple gallons per min.. with a 1.25gal sump. so your reasoning seems inaccurate.
O.K. I'm talking approximately. Plus cold engine usually runs at about 1,500 RPM, not 2K.
How many gallons a minute your pump pushes at 1,500 RPM?

If it took oil "a min to be pumped around the engine"
would not the sump run dry?
How and why in any of those scenarios the sump runs dry?
 
but at a conservative 2000rpm which is what my engine warms up at..
its pumping multiple gallons per min.. with a 1.25gal sump. so your reasoning seems inaccurate.
O.K. I'm talking approximately. Plus cold engine usually runs at about 1,500 RPM, not 2K.
How many gallons a minute your pump pushes at 1,500 RPM?
Also keep in mind that cold thick oil will make the pump cut back on output volume, so it's pumping less to the engine when in pressure relief at 1500 RPM compared to when it's not in relief at 1500 RPM. If the correct W rating is used, there should be no issues with lubrication at cold start-up ... that's the purpose of going by the W rating for the coldest expected start-up.
 
O.K. I'm talking approximately. Plus cold engine usually runs at about 1,500 RPM, not 2K.
How many gallons a minute your pump pushes at 1,500 RPM?


How and why in any of those scenarios the sump runs dry?

Looks like an LS pump moves around 5 GPM at 1,500, which is 22 litres, so with a 5 litre sump, that's the entire sump volume 4.4 times.
 
A 0w-40 engine oil will not perform the same in cold starts compared to a 0w-20 in spite of the 0w rating. that is why the cold cranking simulator (ccs) test gets involved along with mrv testing, pour points have little to do with actual cold (very) flow starting performance in the engine..
 

Looks like an LS pump moves around 5 GPM at 1,500, which is 22 litres, so with a 5 litre sump, that's the entire sump volume 4.4 times.
That's with 5W-30 at 200 deg F (it's noted at the bottom of the graph). With the oil much colder, the pump is going to cut back the output flow quite a bit, even at 1500 RPM.
 
A 0w-40 engine oil will not perform the same in cold starts compared to a 0w-20 in spite of the 0w rating. that is why the cold cranking simulator (ccs) test gets involved along with mrv testing, pour points have little to do with actual cold (very) flow starting performance in the engine..
The oil still needs to meet both the CCS and MRV spec in SAE J300 of the W rating to be labeled that W rating. If an oil meets the W rating, it meets the W rating. If one oil's W rating is much closer to the next lower W rating than another oil with the same W rating, then there might be a slight perceived difference in cranking and starting, but any specified W rated oil for the intended start-up temperature is going to perform without issue.
 
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Healthy skepticism is a good thing! Which part(s) are you skeptical of in regards to Restore and Protect?
Its ability to clean pistons. I work in oil refining and am well aware of how tough it is to remove varnish and coked on deposits. Especially for an engine oil that cant use a ton of aromatics.
I am using it in my daughters Corolla. It was quite nasty when we bought it. Ill be watching to see if it cleaned anything from under the filler cap.
 
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Looks like an LS pump moves around 5 GPM at 1,500, which is 22 litres, so with a 5 litre sump, that's the entire sump volume 4.4 times.
Thanks.
The oil pump turns his 1.25 gal. sump 4 times at 200°F, not a single time as I said.
But how many gallons it will turn around if the oil is at 32°F, 5°F, or 0°F? People don't warm up their engine when the oil temp. is already at 200°F.
 
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That's with 5W-30 at 200 deg F (it's noted at the bottom of the graph). With the oil much colder, the pump is going to cut back the output flow quite a bit, even at 1500 RPM.
Assuming it's on the relief, yes (which it probably would), but as we've seen my the videos of my SRT, it doesn't take long to come off the relief; each application is different :)
 
Thanks.
The oil pump turns his 1.25 gal. sump 4 times at 200°F, not a single time as I said.
Right, but your assertion seemed to be that the sump overturn rate was much slower:
Japanese said:
It takes about a minute for all the oil volume to go once through the oil pump or does one cycle around the engine
But how many gallons it will turn around if the oil is at 32°F, 5°F, or 0°F? People don't warm up their engine when the oil temp. is already at 200°F.
That's going to depend on many factors:
- Oil pump size/volume
- Oil pump relief pressure
- Oil viscosity

If the pump is not on the relief, and we keep the pump as a constant, the volume of oil moved through the engine is the same regardless of the temperature (with your bog-standard PD pump) at a given RPM.

It's the relief on the pump, which shunts some of the volume back to the feed side based on back-pressure from the rest of the engine, that determines how much of the volume the pump is trying to move makes it through the engine.

So, at any of those temperatures you listed, as long as the relief is not engaged, the volume moved matches what you see in the graph.
 
Right, but your assertion seemed to be that the sump overturn rate was much slower:


That's going to depend on many factors:
- Oil pump size/volume
- Oil pump relief pressure
- Oil viscosity

If the pump is not on the relief, and we keep the pump as a constant, the volume of oil moved through the engine is the same regardless of the temperature (with your bog-standard PD pump) at a given RPM.

It's the relief on the pump, which shunts some of the volume back to the feed side based on back-pressure from the rest of the engine, that determines how much of the volume the pump is trying to move makes it through the engine.

So, at any of those temperatures you listed, as long as the relief is not engaged, the volume moved matches what you see in the graph.
Different engines will have different flow quantities through their gallery. Due to more or less restriction on that volume.
It would be interesting to know what that is for a particular engine before assumptions about volumes, pump-ability, etc... are stated here.
 
Different engines will have different flow quantities through their gallery. Due to more or less restriction on that volume.
It would be interesting to know what that is for a particular engine before assumptions about volumes, pump-ability, etc... are stated here.
Yes, different engines will tolerate different volumes of oil at a given viscosity at a given pressure. My 6.4L definitely goes on the relief on a -11C cold start (a video of which I've shared here) but a bit warmer, and that doesn't happen, it gets close, but stays below relief pressure.

We've previously discussed pump volume here:

As the Subi's have crazy oil pumps that move incredible volumes of oil.

The pump in my wife's 1500 moves:
5.7L HEMI pump:
500rpm: 1.90gpm
2,000RPM: 5.08gpm

The pump in my 6.4L is larger, so would move even more.
 
Yes, different engines will tolerate different volumes of oil at a given viscosity at a given pressure. My 6.4L definitely goes on the relief on a -11C cold start (a video of which I've shared here) but a bit warmer, and that doesn't happen, it gets close, but stays below relief pressure.

We've previously discussed pump volume here:

As the Subi's have crazy oil pumps that move incredible volumes of oil.

The pump in my wife's 1500 moves:
5.7L HEMI pump:
500rpm: 1.90gpm
2,000RPM: 5.08gpm

The pump in my 6.4L is larger, so would move even more.
Some statements here don't take into account that the thinner the oil, more volume of it will flow through the same restriction, at the same set pressure - not being by-passed.
 
Some statements here don't take into account that the thinner the oil, more volume of it will flow through the same restriction, at the same set pressure - not being by-passed.
Yeah, if your relief pressure is 65psi, and, for the sake of this discussion, we'll assume it cracks at exactly 65psi, then as long as you are below that pressure, the volume of oil moved through the engine is the same, regardless of what oil is in the pan and what the temperature is. However, if 5W-30 puts you on the relief at say -5C, but 0W-20 doesn't put you on the relief until -15C, then from -5C down, the volume of 0W-20 moving through the engine is higher than the 5W-30 at the same RPM, because RPM and volume are decoupled with the 5W-30 with some of that oil being bypassed back to the feed side, to keep system pressure around relief pressure.

Now of course we've seen situations where the relief is overwhelmed and system pressure goes beyond relief pressure, sometimes well beyond, but that direct relationship between pump RPM and volume moved ceases as soon as the relief is engaged.
 
Hydraulics models - once hot? - a 20 or 30 will be next to nothing on residual pressures. Cold? Way different story - and why folks share their good habits in the morning …
 
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Different engines will have different flow quantities through their gallery. Due to more or less restriction on that volume.
It would be interesting to know what that is for a particular engine before assumptions about volumes, pump-ability, etc... are stated here.
Yes, the size and length of the oil passages/galleries and all the components that get fed pressurized oil contributes to the overall flow restriction of the oiling system as seen by the oil pump. And the oil filter also contributes to that, but typically the oil filter is around 12-15 times less restrictive than the rest of the oiling system so it's pretty negligible. The journal bearings are one of the most flow restrictive components.

So the overall design of the oiling system, including sizing of the oil pump and its pressure relief function that's going to feed the engine adequately in all use conditions (including very cold starts) is what will determine the flow vs RPM performance as shown in the LS pump curve example for each specific engine. Engines oiling systems are going flow more oil than the absolute minimum that would cause lubrication issues if the oiling system engineers were doing it right - including the design of an oiling system with a variable displacement oil pump. I'd say most large automotive engines are going to flow close to 8-10 GPM near redline with hot oil. Of course, having an actual flow vs RPM performance curve would be the real way to know. Bottom line is the most important thing is to use an oil that's not too thick for cold starts, so use the correct W rating.
 
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