Originally Posted By: Clevy
Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
I've switched to full synthetic because I've heard people say it's less likely to cause sludge and varnish. It's mainly the varnish that I'm afraid of because I change my oil way too often to worry about sludge. From what I gather, synthetic is conventional oil that's been processed further to make the molecules more uniform in size; meaning: they're like having a bunch of ball bearings close to being the same size as opposed to the sizes being all different. Now of course, the perfect synthetic oil would have all the molecules the exact same size and shape; we're not there yet.
Nope.
In fact the varying molecule size is actually better because modern machining techniques don't create a perfectly flat surface. Under magnification there are hills and valleys on machined surfaces,so 1 single molecule size doesn't fill all the voids which translates to less effective lubrication.
However if the molecules are varying in size larger ones will fill larger valleys and the smaller ones fit into the smaller valleys.
So Sorry merk. Your wrong on this one.
Regardless of what the advertising claims and what those pretty(useless) pictures show.
I'm gonna nope to your nope. Which bitog expert did you get this from?. I've only known you to regurgitate info from that group
Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
I've switched to full synthetic because I've heard people say it's less likely to cause sludge and varnish. It's mainly the varnish that I'm afraid of because I change my oil way too often to worry about sludge. From what I gather, synthetic is conventional oil that's been processed further to make the molecules more uniform in size; meaning: they're like having a bunch of ball bearings close to being the same size as opposed to the sizes being all different. Now of course, the perfect synthetic oil would have all the molecules the exact same size and shape; we're not there yet.
Nope.
In fact the varying molecule size is actually better because modern machining techniques don't create a perfectly flat surface. Under magnification there are hills and valleys on machined surfaces,so 1 single molecule size doesn't fill all the voids which translates to less effective lubrication.
However if the molecules are varying in size larger ones will fill larger valleys and the smaller ones fit into the smaller valleys.
So Sorry merk. Your wrong on this one.
Regardless of what the advertising claims and what those pretty(useless) pictures show.
I'm gonna nope to your nope. Which bitog expert did you get this from?. I've only known you to regurgitate info from that group