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I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or partly
so) oil. This is much discussed here. Just to get the ball rolling with a focus on older vehicles, from my 1984-1995 Civic/CRX/del Sol Chilton's manual: _____ Both brand new engines and older, high mileage engines are the wrong candidates for synthetic oil. The synthetic oils are so slippery that they can prevent the proper break-in of new engines; most oil manufacturers recommend that you wait until the engine is properly broken in (3,000 miles) before using synthetic oil. Older engines with wear have a different problem with synthetics. The slippery synthetic oils get past these worn parts easily. If your car is leaking oil past old seals you'll have a much greater leak problem with synthetics. _____ You can find this reproduced online at the www.autozone.com , under "Free Repair Guides," "General Information and Maintenance," "Fluids and Lubricants," "Fuel and Engine Oil... " Both these sources have a lot of good things to say about synthetic oil, too. I also see claims (by a Subaru mechanic I once knew and some one here) that synthetic oil will reduce the life of seals on some cars. I will not put synthetic oil into my 1991 Civic LX. I would definitely consider it for a brand new car, though. "Pete from Boston" <masspete@my-deja.com> wrote > I was offered Valvoline "high mileage" motor oil the other day when > having my oil changed. I have a 90 Accord LX, 136K. Should I be using > this stuff? Is there anything to its claims of being better for my ol' > bucket o' bolts? |
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||I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or partly ||so) oil. Valvoline Max-Life - It's a premium oil, but not synthetic. It's the additive package that is reformulated to address the different needs of a motor with some age and wear. It has seal softeners, more anti-wear and things like that. Makes sense to me. I use this or the Castrol High Mileage in several of my vehicles which use some il. I also use it in an old tractor. ||This is much discussed here. Just to get the ball rolling with a focus on older ||vehicles, from my 1984-1995 Civic/CRX/del Sol Chilton's manual: ||_____ ||Both brand new engines and older, high mileage engines are the wrong candidates ||for synthetic oil. The synthetic oils are so slippery that they can prevent the ||proper break-in of new engines; most oil manufacturers recommend that you wait ||until the engine is properly broken in (3,000 miles) before using synthetic oil. I think that's a little out of date. A number of engines now come with Mobil 1 as factory fill. Lats more come with semi-sythetics as factory fill. The latter category is getting smewhat blurred as synthetics are mostly coming from highly refined petro-sources, and the newest oil specs from the manufacturers will almost mandate the use of high "snthetic" content. My rule is run the original oil to 3000 miles, then switch to synthetic for 2000, then change synthetic at 5K mile intervals. Use synthetic until oil consumption makes it uneconomical - which never happens. ||Older engines with wear have a different problem with synthetics. The slippery ||synthetic oils get past these worn parts easily. If your car is leaking oil past ||old seals you'll have a much greater leak problem with synthetics. This was more of a problem with early formulations f Mobil 1. It had a lower surface tension. I understand that has been fixed. Also, seals are much better now, as is the micro-polished steel the seals now ride against. Texas Parts Guy |
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It doesn't make any sense that this oil would be any different than the
regular oil. Does it make any sense that an oil company is going to offer a better dyno oil and a regular dyno oil...nope. As far as your synthetic oil in new engines is concerned that can be debunked quite easily. Many new cars, BMW's, Vettes, etc come with synthetic from the factory and the warranty can be voided by not using synthetic. So there goes the new engines can't have synthetic oil because it prevents them from breaking in properly theory. As far as the oil being more slippery and leaking past previously leaking parts and not using synthetic in an older engine,,,,that is also garbage. The fact is that dino oil sludges up much more than any synthetic ever will. When synthetic is introduced to an older engine with leaks, chances are that the synthetic does such a good job of cleaning deposits from inside an engine that it is removing deposits from leaky areas creating more of a potential for a leak. Synthetic oil does not cause oil leaks. If you have a piece of shit car that isn't maintained properly then it has reached a point of homeostasis. Screwing around with anything like doing tranny flushes, using synthetics etc can upset this balance and cause problems. It has nothing to do with the service performed or chemicals/oils used in the car. I am fortunate in that I have a 96 accord which has had synthetic ran in it since 1999 with 32k and now has about 117k. It has never leaked a single drop, and I have never made any repairs to any seals or gaskets. "Caroline" <caroline10027remove@earthlink.net> wrote in message news:NtTJc.5185$Qu5.1967@newsread2.news.pas.earthl ink.net... > I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or partly > so) oil. > > This is much discussed here. Just to get the ball rolling with a focus on older > vehicles, from my 1984-1995 Civic/CRX/del Sol Chilton's manual: > _____ > Both brand new engines and older, high mileage engines are the wrong candidates > for synthetic oil. The synthetic oils are so slippery that they can prevent the > proper break-in of new engines; most oil manufacturers recommend that you wait > until the engine is properly broken in (3,000 miles) before using synthetic oil. > Older engines with wear have a different problem with synthetics. The slippery > synthetic oils get past these worn parts easily. If your car is leaking oil past > old seals you'll have a much greater leak problem with synthetics. > _____ > > You can find this reproduced online at the www.autozone.com , under "Free Repair > Guides," "General Information and Maintenance," "Fluids and Lubricants," "Fuel > and Engine Oil... " > > Both these sources have a lot of good things to say about synthetic oil, too. > > I also see claims (by a Subaru mechanic I once knew and some one here) that > synthetic oil will reduce the life of seals on some cars. > > I will not put synthetic oil into my 1991 Civic LX. I would definitely consider > it for a brand new car, though. > > "Pete from Boston" <masspete@my-deja.com> wrote > > I was offered Valvoline "high mileage" motor oil the other day when > > having my oil changed. I have a 90 Accord LX, 136K. Should I be using > > this stuff? Is there anything to its claims of being better for my ol' > > bucket o' bolts? > > |
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"CaptainKrunch" <nobody@nothing.com> wrote
> It doesn't make any sense that this oil would be any different than the > regular oil. Does it make any sense that an oil company is going to offer a > better dyno oil and a regular dyno oil...nope. I don't know why these things don't make sense to you. They make sense to me. If you're saying all commercially available non-synthetic engine oils are the same, then okay. I don't agree, but I doubt either of us has anything authoritative to cite on the subject. I happen to think Pennzoil is a better quality oil than Wal-Mart's Super-Tech, for example. Why would the same company offer two qualities of oil? Bottom line, to make money. Some consumers will go for the cheap stuff. Some will go for the more expensive stuff. Maybe the expensive stuff is a ripoff; maybe it's worth it. Probably depends. > As far as your synthetic oil in new engines is concerned that can be > debunked quite easily. Many new cars, BMW's, Vettes, etc come with > synthetic from the factory and the warranty can be voided by not using > synthetic. So there goes the new engines can't have synthetic oil because > it prevents them from breaking in properly theory. Gotta be a reason why some car manufacturers are saying do not use synthetic for break-in (so I've heard), then. > As far as the oil being more slippery and leaking That should be "leaking worse." > past previously leaking > parts and not using synthetic in an older engine,,,,that is also garbage. I trust the Subaru mechanic I knew as well as Chilton's on this point. George M. too, suggested not long ago there are some concerns on this point. But your opinion is noted. I just don't know on what it is based, so it doesn't have a lot of value to me. Maybe it will to others. > The fact is that dino oil sludges up much more than any synthetic ever will. This is believable. > When synthetic is introduced to an older engine with leaks, chances are that > the synthetic does such a good job of cleaning deposits from inside an > engine that it is removing deposits from leaky areas creating more of a > potential for a leak. Synthetic oil does not cause oil leaks. If you want to look at it this way, fine. But I don't think it's exactly an honest conclusion to say that the synth oil did not cause the leaks. If it hadn't been put in, the leaks would not have occurred. So what are you going to tell someone with an older, high mileage car? Sounds to me you'd give him/her the same bottom line as Chilton's: Putting synthetic into an older car is a risk. > If you have a piece of shit car that isn't maintained properly then it has > reached a point of homeostasis. Screwing around with anything like doing > tranny flushes, using synthetics etc can upset this balance and cause > problems. It has nothing to do with the service performed or chemicals/oils > used in the car. Well you just said that using synthetics can upset the balance, so apparently it has something to do with the oils used in the car. Or we can write this off as a semantical point. > I am fortunate in that I have a 96 accord which has had synthetic ran in it > since 1999 with 32k and now has about 117k. It has never leaked a single > drop, and I have never made any repairs to any seals or gaskets. A car aged 3 years and 32k miles is neither old nor high mileage, IMO. I'm sure this latest rehash of this topic will be helpful to the newbies, but I for one feel rigid conclusions on this point are not really supportable at this time except by mostly guessing. I choose to err on the side of preserving seal integrity. I'm not putting synthetic oil into my old car. I'm not trusting claims that there is any other "high mileage" oil worthy of my car. > "Caroline" <caroline10027remove@earthlink.net> wrote > > I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or > partly > > so) oil. > > > > This is much discussed here. Just to get the ball rolling with a focus on > older > > vehicles, from my 1984-1995 Civic/CRX/del Sol Chilton's manual: > > _____ > > Both brand new engines and older, high mileage engines are the wrong > candidates > > for synthetic oil. The synthetic oils are so slippery that they can > prevent the > > proper break-in of new engines; most oil manufacturers recommend that you > wait > > until the engine is properly broken in (3,000 miles) before using > synthetic oil. > > Older engines with wear have a different problem with synthetics. The > slippery > > synthetic oils get past these worn parts easily. If your car is leaking > oil past > > old seals you'll have a much greater leak problem with synthetics. > > _____ > > > > You can find this reproduced online at the www.autozone.com , under "Free > Repair > > Guides," "General Information and Maintenance," "Fluids and Lubricants," > "Fuel > > and Engine Oil... " > > > > Both these sources have a lot of good things to say about synthetic oil, > too. > > > > I also see claims (by a Subaru mechanic I once knew and some one here) > that > > synthetic oil will reduce the life of seals on some cars. > > > > I will not put synthetic oil into my 1991 Civic LX. I would definitely > consider > > it for a brand new car, though. > > > > "Pete from Boston" <masspete@my-deja.com> wrote > > > I was offered Valvoline "high mileage" motor oil the other day when > > > having my oil changed. I have a 90 Accord LX, 136K. Should I be using > > > this stuff? Is there anything to its claims of being better for my ol' > > > bucket o' bolts? > > > > > > |
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I wrote: > I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or partly > so) oil. Wrong assumption. From what I can tell, it's not at all synthetic. Here's Valvoline's claim: http://www.valvoline.com/carcare/art...cr20030901v2&p rint=1 "High mileage" below and in the subject line refers to Valvoline recommending this car for older cars that have a lot of miles on them. This particular oil itself isn't necessarily supposed to increase the time and miles between oil changes, from what I can tell, in contrast with synthetics. So to get to the bottom of the original poster's query, the focus should not be on synthetic oils... My mistake. |
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Caroline wrote: > "CaptainKrunch" <nobody@nothing.com> wrote > >>It doesn't make any sense that this oil would be any different than the >>regular oil. Does it make any sense that an oil company is going to offer a >>better dyno oil and a regular dyno oil...nope. > > > I don't know why these things don't make sense to you. They make sense to me. > > If you're saying all commercially available non-synthetic engine oils are the > same, then okay. I don't agree, but I doubt either of us has anything > authoritative to cite on the subject. I wouldn't say they're all the same. However - I'd guess that there's far less difference now with the API SL standards. > I happen to think Pennzoil is a better quality oil than Wal-Mart's Super-Tech, > for example. That I don't know about. There were rumors that Wal-Mart purchased Quaker State oil. Since the Pennzoil/QS/Shell merger(s), there's a good possibility that they've simply relabelled the same stuff under different brand names. Shell and Texaco joined operations under the "Equilon" (since disbanded) name, and sold the same fuel product with two brand names. Selling essentially the same product under multiple brand "identities" is a common marketing tool. Face it - a lot of people a big on brand loyalty. > Why would the same company offer two qualities of oil? Bottom line, to make > money. Some consumers will go for the cheap stuff. Some will go for the more > expensive stuff. Maybe the expensive stuff is a ripoff; maybe it's worth it. > Probably depends. In many cases it's cheaper just to run one production line and sell that product using multiple labels/resellers. |
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CaptainKrunch wrote: > As far as the oil being more slippery and leaking past previously leaking > parts and not using synthetic in an older engine,,,,that is also garbage. > The fact is that dino oil sludges up much more than any synthetic ever will. > When synthetic is introduced to an older engine with leaks, chances are that > the synthetic does such a good job of cleaning deposits from inside an > engine that it is removing deposits from leaky areas creating more of a > potential for a leak. Synthetic oil does not cause oil leaks. No - the biggest problem is that PAO-based synthetic base oil has a tendency to harden seals by causing the seal plasticizers to leach out. This is counteracted by seal-swell ingredients and an ester base oil. I believe newer seal materials are made to be compatible with synthetic oils. Mobil had some pretty nasty leakage problems when Mobil 1 first came out. The seal materials weren't very compatible, and they reformulated it to prevent leaking. Synthetic oil doesn't have any magical cleaning properties. In fact PAO supposedly has less inherent "detergency" than conventional base oil. Any PAO-based oil (Mobil 1 is an example) will need to have a boosted amount of detergent additive. This "false seal" theory is the one that's been espoused by Amsoil sales droids for years. As for the Valvoline High Mileage - I'm told it's pretty good stuff. Uses a Type-III base oil and a boosted additive package. There are now similar oils, including several semi-synthetics. |
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"y_p_w" <y_p_w@hotmail.com> wrote
> Caroline wrote: snip but comments noted > > I happen to think Pennzoil is a better quality oil than Wal-Mart's Super-Tech, > > for example. > > That I don't know about. There were rumors that Wal-Mart purchased > Quaker State oil. Since the Pennzoil/QS/Shell merger(s), there's a > good possibility that they've simply relabelled the same stuff under > different brand names. Shell and Texaco joined operations under the > "Equilon" (since disbanded) name, and sold the same fuel product with > two brand names. Selling essentially the same product under multiple > brand "identities" is a common marketing tool. Face it - a lot of > people a big on brand loyalty. I agree. My decision to go Pennzoil all the way is based merely on groupthink (that is, a lot of people swear by it) and some sludge experiences with Quaker State 20 years ago. But for all I know all non-synth motor oils available today are the same. > > Why would the same company offer two qualities of oil? Bottom line, to make > > money. Some consumers will go for the cheap stuff. Some will go for the more > > expensive stuff. Maybe the expensive stuff is a ripoff; maybe it's worth it. > > Probably depends. > > In many cases it's cheaper just to run one production line and > sell that product using multiple labels/resellers. I kinda doubt this. If, for example, Valvoline's "cars with high mileage" oil is the same as its other oils, Valvoline would risk legal charges of fraud for claiming they're different. Now maybe the changes Valvoline makes from one non-synth oil to the next are miniscule, so it gets around charges of fraud. But I really have no idea. |
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On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 20:08:06 GMT, NOSPAMrex@REMOVEtxol.net (Rex B) wrote:
> >||I assume this Valvoline high mileage oil is some kind of synthetic (or partly >||so) oil. > >Valvoline Max-Life - It's a premium oil, but not synthetic. It's the additive >package that is reformulated to address the different needs of a motor with some >age and wear. It has seal softeners, more anti-wear and things like that. >Makes sense to me. I use this or the Castrol High Mileage in several of my >vehicles which use some il. I also use it in an old tractor. > >||This is much discussed here. Just to get the ball rolling with a focus on >older >||vehicles, from my 1984-1995 Civic/CRX/del Sol Chilton's manual: >||_____ >||Both brand new engines and older, high mileage engines are the wrong >candidates >||for synthetic oil. The synthetic oils are so slippery that they can prevent >the >||proper break-in of new engines; most oil manufacturers recommend that you wait >||until the engine is properly broken in (3,000 miles) before using synthetic >oil. > >I think that's a little out of date. A number of engines now come with Mobil 1 >as factory fill. Those that do have engines which are not built from the parts bin though - closer to a blueprinted engine and often get some extensive bench/dyno runs before they leave the factory. > Lats more come with semi-sythetics as factory fill. The >latter category is getting smewhat blurred as synthetics are mostly coming from >highly refined petro-sources, and the newest oil specs from the manufacturers >will almost mandate the use of high "snthetic" content. > My rule is run the original oil to 3000 miles, then switch to synthetic for >2000, then change synthetic at 5K mile intervals. Use synthetic until oil >consumption makes it uneconomical - which never happens. > >||Older engines with wear have a different problem with synthetics. The slippery >||synthetic oils get past these worn parts easily. If your car is leaking oil >past >||old seals you'll have a much greater leak problem with synthetics. > >This was more of a problem with early formulations f Mobil 1. It had a lower >surface tension. I understand that has been fixed. Also, seals are much better >now, as is the micro-polished steel the seals now ride against. Even so, with an engine which has seals conditioned by the basestock and additives in a petroleum oil, changing to an oil with different chemistry for seal conditioning *could* lead to disaster. Taking the chance of blowing a rear seal is not an economic consideration you want for an old engine. Rgds, George Macdonald "Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me?? |
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