Dang this kinda aged badlyIts a big marketing hype/push and will likely hit clearance in a year.
Dang this kinda aged badlyIts a big marketing hype/push and will likely hit clearance in a year.
Dang this kinda aged badly
But felt compelled to add to it.Without AI, and some number of tokens, I gave up long ago trying to understand this three thousand five hundred and twenty two post thread.
Unholy union...son used it in his S3 with Liquimoly MoS2. May God have mercy on his soul...
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But felt compelled to add to it.
This will be an interesting experiment. There has been speculation that Valvoline Restore and Protect needs a hot engine to work.
It was tongue in cheek, Sir. I am guilty too.I responded to a post, just like you did.![]()
I've probably mentioned this before, but I sometimes find the shelf where an oil should be is empty at Walmart, but if you take a picture of the tag and take it to a register or corner someone to check stock, every time they showed stock. Last time found the Valvoline Restore and Protect 5W-20 for our daughter's CR-V on the top shelf above its empty shelf space, but the jugs were well out of reach without a ladder... and turned around where you couldn't see the viscosity. Found more jugs on the top shelf across the aisle turned backwards, also.When I go to Walmart one of the things is to check out is how stocked are the Mobil and Valvoline oil, and other oils too. So, what I saw today was Valvoline Restore and Protect 5W-30 out of stock (the other two viscosity were available) and only one jug of Mobil 1 Extended Protection 0W-20.
I've also seen the Valvoline Restore and Protect jugs hidden behind other non-Valvoline Restore and Protect jugs and had to dig around a bit to find the 5W30 variants. It almost feels like someone is hiding them intentionally as some form of "hoard-without-buying" scheme. I wonder if it actually works because if I drove all the way to walmart, I'm going to spend some time looking.I've probably mentioned this before, but I sometimes find the shelf where an oil should be is empty at Walmart, but if you take a picture of the tag and take it to a register or corner someone to check stock, every time they showed stock. Last time found the Valvoline Restore and Protect 5W-20 for our daughter's CR-V on the top shelf above its empty shelf space, but the jugs were well out of reach without a ladder... and turned around where you couldn't see the viscosity. Found more jugs on the top shelf across the aisle turned backwards, also.
Trust, but verify.
Valvoline has released a follow-up video to the two engines in Ford Explorers that had been run side-by-side for 500k miles on their chassis dynos, one with Valvoline conventional oil and the other Valvoline Full Synthetic. They tore down both engines to see how they looked after 500k miles.
They put the motors back together and rigged them to engine dynos, filling both with Valvoline Restore and Protect. After running two OCIs, curiosity got the best of them, so they tore them down again. This is the results after two OCIs. The chemist who developed Valvoline Restore and Protect explains why they designed the oil to not be too aggressive in its cleaning properties. Excellent video.
They put out a video today on two 500k+ turbocharged ford engines, one ran on full synthetic and one on conventional.When Valvoline offers a Youtube video on how four separate OCIs of this stuff progresses over time in a TGDI-sooty engine, I'll become more-of a believer.
In this case - no. It has the same or a bit more ZDDP than car oil. Also it's rated API SP, so soon we may see somebody who will try it in his car. Also, modern motorcycles have cat. converters too.Don't motorcycle oils for combined engine&transmission contain too much zinc for catalytic converters, or was that only back in the time?
It's an xW-40 so the SP rating doesn't matter for phosphorous content.In this case - no. It has the same or a bit more ZDDP than car oil. Also it's rated API SP, so I think we may have soon somebody who will try it in his car. Also, modern motorcycles have cat. converters too.
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I know I've expressed interest and hope that Valvoline would make a motorcycle oil. Can't recall if it was this forum or where it was? But this is exciting! I'd love to see that in 20w50 since I've been using Mobil or Amsoil 20w50. But this would probably work great in my bike since it specs 20w40 (weird Victory spec). It doesn't mention anything about air cooled engines like mine, but I don't know if that makes a big difference? I typically see around 235F oil temps, sometimes a little over 250F.Who asked around here for Valvoline Restore and Protect for motorcycles or it was in the motorcycles forum?
I think it's already up Valvoline Restore and Protect 4T 10W-40 motorcycle. This page is for the Valvoline US oils:
https://pisheets.valvolineglobal.co...-10w-40-premium-full-synthetic-motorcycle-oil
The PDS as well:
https://sharena21.springcm.com/Publ...fbeb5cd3/54f94e18-6916-f111-b824-9440c99ff6c1
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