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Engine Additives
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Plus, Amsoil warranties its oil for extended intervals and will fight the battle for you if the delaer claims Amsoil failed to properly lubricate!
Contaminates,moisture and acids build up in an engine and start to eat away bearings,rings and cylinders.So,if you want to extend your intervals and save that extra $50 a year,more power to you.
Personally,I have enough knowledge about oils that I prefer to go with the recommended oil changes on my wifes new car and every 6 months on my older pickup,because it only gets driven about 200 miles a month.If you live in a very wet climate as I do,moisture contaminates oil over a period of time.If you question contamination of oil,buy an oil sample analysis kit,they are available from CATERPILLER for about $17,it includes a sample bottle and prepaid postage container,you send in the sample and they will analyze it and send a report.The report breaks down the contaminates in Parts Per Million(PPM) and it will list chemicals and metals that are contaminating the oil,then if you don't understand what you are looking at,they will have a toll free number to call for an explanation.You would be surprised at what contaminates get into oils.
after about 4 years. Someone finally told me a real reason for it, namely carbon deposits. Better gas (premium) helped but did not make the problem go away.
My wife however does not have this problem, so I am beginning to think it is my driving habits. I tend to buy more overpowered cars than she does so I might be working the engine too hard or not hard enough. I might be revving too low also (not downshifting when I need to), but I don't know for sure.
I also seen advertisements for gas additives that remove carbon deposits. Anybody know anything about these? I also paid a dealer once $125 to remove carbon deposits, they put something like oven cleaner in the engine overnight. This made it better but the problem still didn't go away.
Paradoxically, driving the engine harder also seems help keep things clean but I don't know if that contributes to the buildup problem in the long term.
And an engine that pings is no fun to drive at all. I have a mechanic friend who gives me dour warnings of what hard pinging can do to your cylinder heads.
I just bought a new car and would like to take whatever steps are necessary to prevent this from happening again. Does anybody have any ideas?
kmh3
Some of my cars seem to "cook" oil worse than others, maybe it is how hard they are driven or what temparature they operate at, I don't really know for sure.
I had a Dakota V8 (CC) once and it wasn't hard on oil (except that it burned it after 35k mostly city miles). I enjoyed that truck. It could pass anything but a gas station and never gave me any trouble for the five years I had it.
kmh3
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference
I think most of benefits of additives one hears about from owners are are mostly psychological. It is the placebo effect. I have begun to use synthetic oil (Pennzoil) in my 1991 Honda Prelude (174000 miles) and Mobil-1 in 1994 Mazda Miata. I change my oils at 5000-5500 miles.
This no longer has to do with engine additives, but it partially answers the question I posted earlier.
After lots of research, filled mostly with unsupported anecdotes (which this post is mostly as well), and one well documented post on Yahoo about gasoline chemistry, the bottom line on why my engines all developed pinging and my wife's didn't was that she uses regular and I used super (premium).
It turns out that putting higher octane gas into an engine designed for regular increases carbon deposit buildup (as well as reducing power and gas mileage, reduced power makes it seem smoother which is why it is seductive).
Engines normally achieve an equilibrium state (see the yahoo link if you can find it) after about 10,000 miles where the rate of carbon deposit buildup roughly equals the rate at which the carbon deposits flake off. Driving the engine a little harder (after it is warmed up) will increase the flake-off rate, although it reduces your has mileage.
Premium increases the rate of deposit formation and will therefore cause this steady state to be above the ping level for most engines designed for regular.
Also, all gasolines are not equal. Radically different formulations are permissable and will still obtain an "87" octane rating. This means you need to test around to find which gas works best for your car.
This is harder now since with the advent of anti-knock sensors on modern engines, pinging is no longer audible, since the onboard computer will retard the timing if pinging is detected. This will reduce power and gas mileage slightly, so one can no longer experiment around as easily to see which gas alleviates the pinging (and it takes a month or so for a new steady state to be reached).
Now we must use the regular that gives us the best gas mileage (since this is a result of using normal timing). Also, if a gas mileage drop is observed then pinging (with the onboard computers timing slowdown) may be the cause, the answer may be switching to a different brand of gasoline and waiting a month to see what happens.
I have seen posts about cars getting mysteriously low gas mileage and wonder if this might be the cause (I will post separately).
Obviously, additives to temporarily remove carbon deposits are less desirable than achieving a steady state that does not require such additives in the first place.
Keeping injectors clean can also contribute to eliminating pinging as far as I can tell.
kmh3
So you can reinterpret my earlier posting to mean that Syntec breaks down visibly by 5,000 miles. I am switching to mobil 1 after this discovery.
kmh3
Jim
Synthetic motor oil (Topic #543)
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference
really good. Oil has so improved since then;
for your engine.
Anyway, he turned us on to Militec two years ago. When he said he wanted to add it to the truck, I couldn't believe he had fallen for a bogus "engine additive," and I let him have a piece of my mind - in a nice way
He's been using it in his fleet of ambulances for the past seven years. These trucks are driven in dusty, west Texas heat and abused in the worst way, each averaging about 60-70k miles-a-year (not to mention idling hours). He said the severity and frequency of general engine/valve/transmission/air conditioning failures in his fleet has dropped dramatically since using Militec. He said he was skeptical at first too, but now he puts the stuff in everything - engine, transmission (auto and manual), A/C compressors and differential.
So far my brother-inlaw says he has noticed about a 1-2mph improvement in gas mileage, easier starts, smoother trans shifts and a seat-of-the-pants feeling of increased engine power.
I know, it sounds like all the typical too good to be true claims we've all heard - but I'm just telling you what I know. I am very much in the "engine additives are snake oil" camp myself. And the advice given here to regularly change oil & filter with an SJ-rated oil and top-quality filter is probably all any of us need to do to extend the life of our motors. But for some heavy-duty users, Militec might be worth a look. (My brother-inlaw will put 60k on his truck this year.)
And by the way, the stuff is expensive! $175 a gallon - but that will last you quite a while.
http://www.militec1.com/automotive.htm
-gvmelbrty
check it regularly, keep it filled... try not to panic... a switch to syn wouldn't *hurt* (i'm a dedicated syn user myself), you may experience some leakage due to old gaskets with syn...
additives are snake oil... the best proof of that is that major oil manufacturers don't put it in their addpack and advertise the heck out of it...
-Chris
If you want, and this depends on your climate, you can switch to a straight grade of oil. On older engines that burn oil you can switch to a straight SAE 30 weight of oil. This oil will be pretty thick in the Winter if you are in a cold climate and that could cause problems. If you are in a moderate climate it may help to reduce the burning do to being thicker.
Water is a great additive for engines. Drive around on a rainy day, and the high humidity will remove a lot of carbon from your engine. Adding water manually is not recommended.
Harry
During cold starts the engine knocks. The Ford dealer changed the fan clutch and belt. No help.
Now Ford says they have several reports of engine knocks and recommend replacing the engine with a new and improved model.. WOW!!Has anyone heard of this service bulletin?
;->
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference
-Chris
:-)
Pat
I have a 95 Subaru that has just begun leaking oil and am considering trying one before doing an engine teardown. Thanks.
www.geocities.com/motorcity/2195/snakeoil.html#top Some interesting reading.
Al
and the Dealer added "Krex Graphite Super Lubricant" and "Krex Fuel System Treatment". The dealer has gone as far as having this printed into the "What we do" listing, so it would seem that it's something that they have been routinely doing for awhile. I have no idea if Acura recommends this or if it's just something that this particular dealer does.
Anyhow, anybody ever heard of Krex?
Any opinions on "graphite super lubricant?" Since there's also the Krex fuel system treatment, I'm assuming they dumped a bunch of graphite in my oil.....
None of the engine treatment products such as Slick 50, Duralube, Prolong, or any of the countless others, offer any benefits to your engine whatsoever. In fact, they go as far as to say that some may even damage your engine by clogging up your oil filter. Stay away from them, they're a waste of money.
The best protection you can give your engine is to use nothing but full synthetic motor oil. No additives, no dino, and no synthetic blends. They also said that none of the synthetic blends contain more than 10% synthetic. Another waste of money.
My Cadillac STS has the on board MPG computer and I get exactly what Z-MAX claims, an increase of 10% better gas mileage. Before using this product The car was getting exactly an average of 18.5 MPG... Now I'm getting 20.5 MPG. and I only put 1/2 the bottle, and thats into 7.5 quarts of oil, the other 1/2 will go in at the next 3,000 mile oil change. I think I'ts better this way instead of using it all up at once, only to be flushed out at the next oil change.
This benefit would only indicate there is less resistance to all the moving parts and providing less wear and tear to your engine.
I'm not thrilled about buying the thing over the phone only to wait several weeks to get it. One of the guys touting it in the commercial has a Precision Tune uniform on and maybe those shops can add ZMax. I haven't seen one in Dallas-Fort Worth but I really haven't been actively looking.
Also, I thought K-Mart sold it but I looked and they have Prolong but not ZMax. Wal-Mart doesn't have it. Neither do most of the auto parts stores I've been to. Has anyone seen the stuff on store shelves? The lady on the phone said she didn't know of any but that she didn't mean to say they weren't available somewhere other than off of TV.
The Accent I am driving now I have had for 6,000 miles. It now has almost 101K. I changed the oil at 97K and I just had to add a quart so at least it is not using a lot of oil. I think a quart in 3500 miles is perfectly normal, considering some of the cars I have owned have used a quart of oil every tank of gas or even MORE frequently. I will probably not use anything except oil in this car but I am thinking of buying a new 2000/2001 Protege or maybe another Accent or even a Suzuki Swift. Depends on what I can afford payment-wise.
I like the combination fuel system and oil treatment to help reduce carbon build up. Anybody can tell you they have driven their cars for very high mileage and never used engine additives, so have I. I just think that today's sophisticated multi valve, multi everything need a little help to stay young.
I have read many reports about Cadillac's North star engines exhibiting severe oil usage, mine doesn't burn a drop since I bought the car 6 months ago, I want to keep It that way.