- Joined
- Dec 16, 2022
- Messages
- 1,130
Based on copper alone, I'd say this is a "win" for the PUP and there's no need to pull 30 samples to reasonably conclude that. The copper went up and the SS went in and it came back down when the SS came out. Cause and effect.
This is ironic, defending the use of UOA's and then getting the copper "element" wrong

As pointed out all over this forum many times, the copper is from leaching (cooling system, not valve train), and not wear, but it's not necessarily a win for an oil that shows less of it. The esters cause the leaching, so you'd have to prove that having more esters in your oil is contributing to more wear, and this is the exact opposite of what is actually happening. Esters reduce friction and wear, and are excellent solvents. They also help lower the pour point of an oil. All excellent characteristics of a high quality motor oil.
So while defending the use of UOA's you actually fell victim to the very warnings pointed out here.