Something an engine sees when sitting is condensation. I'd trust a group III/III+ synthetic, with a lower ambient temp viscosity, more than a group II conventional when it comes to dealing with moisture, especially with a non-detergent oil as there's nothing there to slow or prevent rapid oxidation should water be present. Thus, I'd want base oils that are naturally more resistant to oxidation. Oxidized and dirty oil will be less effective at preventing rust.
Another factor is evaporation, as mentioned above, but not in the sense of rust. Realistically, even very light conventional base oil like Nexbase 3030 would have little to no evaporation at ambient temperature. The issue is altitude. When you're 15,000 ft high, air pressure is -45% less than at sea level. Lower air pressure means volatility increases. (This is also why avgas has very high lower distillation points compared to other gasoline blends.) This is why you don't see a 0W-30 aviation oil as the need for light base oils to meet that winter grade would make the oil too volatile at high altitude. Somebody like HPL could probably make a 0W-30 that's less volatile than that P66 goo, but they'd be the only ones crazy enough to attempt it.
Higher cylinder head temps would, once again, favor synthetic base oil. Synthetic will take the heat better.
It's possible the reason conventional is still favored in aviation oil is simply due to customer opinion or theory. Companies (especially the majors) produce products that will sell, not necessarily what works best. Even if P66 found much better results with a group III synthetic, the fact that 95% of their customers (in that realm) think synthetic sucks means they're more likely to use a conventional base oil, that they know is inferior, because it's what will sell. Then because the company keeps making only conventional, that further validates the myth that conventional is better, and that pile of bull manure gets bigger and bigger.
It's possible the reason conventional is still favored in aviation oil is simply due to customer opinion or theory. Companies (especially the majors) produce products that will sell, not necessarily what works best. Even if P66 found much better results with a group III synthetic, the fact that 95% of their customers (in that realm) think synthetic sucks means they're more likely to use a conventional base oil, that they know is inferior, because it's what will sell. Then because the company keeps making only conventional, that further validates the myth that conventional is better, and that pile of bull manure gets bigger and bigger.
Yeah, " slick" in their marketing and" slick " in relieving people's wallets of money ! The process of bonding teflon to metal sure doesn't happen from pouring a room temperature liquid ( with no metal surface prep or chemical primer/ binder adhered to the metal surface) into an engine crankcase and then operating the engine. Otherwise the cookware manufacturers have been doing it wrong for all these years.STP was fined as mentioned. DuraLube that I fell for in the early 80s was found to be near 100% simple 5w30 motor oil. Slick50 was found to be more "slick" than anything close to special.
In a prior role, I supported many household name companies who buy lots of large Cummins-powered generators for data centers.#1) Many do not know or will not accept the facts about condensation. Especially when setting up any engines for the storage. Just like a lot of folks argue "how/why can I have condensation in my gas tank when I have it sealed up?" Well , just like "rust never sleeps" which is 100% true, condensation is all around us all the time. Gets into places one would least expect.
#2) Companies sell what people will buy. LoL It has often been said that fishing lure makers , developed and sold lots of baits designed to "catch fisherman and not really the fish."
There are many things folks can / should do when they store engines or vehicles to prevent issues when put back into use. I myself have stored and resurrected a few with minimal issues. All of them were stored inside garage or shops.
I agree that the "synthetic-bad, Group II good," myth has been perpetuated throughout the industry as an incorrect cause-and-effect relationship....It's possible the reason conventional is still favored in aviation oil is simply due to customer opinion or theory. Companies (especially the majors) produce products that will sell, not necessarily what works best. Even if P66 found much better results with a group III synthetic, the fact that 95% of their customers (in that realm) think synthetic sucks means they're more likely to use a conventional base oil, that they know is inferior, because it's what will sell. Then because the company keeps making only conventional, that further validates the myth that conventional is better, and that pile of bull manure gets bigger and bigger.
I agree that the "synthetic-bad, Group II good," myth has been perpetuated throughout the industry as an incorrect cause-and-effect relationship.
We have shown it was the poor additive package and not the base oil that was the problem with the Mobil AV. so why this myth keeps being repeated is beyond sensical.