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tom
Jack
Notice that both Castrol and QState also have high mileage oils. It's an up and coming trend.
I may quit using it.
add CD-2 detergent
add STP
add Bar's stop leak
then you would have any brand of maxlife you want.
Once you add anything to the oil you have probably "de"-API-approved the oil you are using anyway.
I catch a lot of flak on these oil related posts because I add STP to oil for older engines, in a way I am making my own maxlife (so-to-speak) myself. Anyone using maxlife is just adding detergent/ZDDP/ and seal swell (probably just smaller proportions than if they added a full bottle of each though.
I imagine the ZDDP would be the main reason they would not API approved, just guessing though.
Rando
I say it's over-rated. A lot of oils won't meet the specifications for SJ or SL oils because their additive package is too potent (good).
Look at some racing oils, they only meet SG or SH specs because of this.
If I couldn't find a 5W20 oil for my 2001 Ford or Honda, I'd use a 5W30 synthetic ... or even a 0W30 synthetic.
--- Bror Jace
STP - Documented proof. When I was a little sprout, I had a hydroplane with a 5 1/2 hp Johnson. I'd head down the river and in 15-20 minutes the engine would grind to a halt. Carried a large monkey wrench with me and after sloshing water on the engine to cool it down, I would break it free. Off I would go again! I found that if I added STP to the gas that I could almost double the time before the engine seized. Can't figure out why I just didn't just put in a new water pump. Oh, to be young.
BG MOA in my very humble opinion you are wasting money on the additive and at the worst could be counteracting the additive that the manufacturer spent lots of money developing. The proper syn oil has been shown to take cars 200K with 15K oil changes and almost no wear on wear parts. How can you do better than that? And it would be difficult for you (or me) to say that the product is doing any good.
Not making fun of it, I use STP (the generic brand anyway) in my older truck, hang on to that old can!
see ya
Rando
volvo[turbo]. [Mobil1, Citgo, Castrol gtx]
Does anyone know which non synthetic oil
has a universal opinion for excellence.
I have Castrol gtx in the crankcase right now
and it seems good. Someone told me Castrol has
no paraffins and has many years of experience
in cars that rev high.
Is the gtx a good choice to stick with and have others had great longevity with gtx?[250-400kmles]
TY
rd
Try Havoline etc. Personally, with the turbo, (assume you let it wind down before shutting engine off) and coking I would use Mobil 1 all the time
TY
RD
Now they are doing things like mentioned above, charging synthetic oil price for a modified petroleum oil, maybe legal I don't know, but when brands like M1 are going the distance to make a better product (and charging for it), Castrol seems to be cashing in on other companies efforts,,,getting on the synthetic bandwagon with a not true synthetic product..
I use Havoline now (petroleum,3k/3mo) I have noticed the Texaco stations advertising that they take Shell cards now,,,,I also am curious what will happen with Tex/Havoline products when the 2 finalize the merge.
I have never heard anything bad about Shell products, but Shell does not have brand awareness that Havoline does either...I see Texaco/Havoline everywhere, I don't see Shell quite as much.
We will see I guess
Good Morning
Rando
As for the Shell products, I life in North Carolina, maybe we will start seeing more of it around here with time, right now someplaces have it some don't, usually I only see the Rotella-t except for at the stations themselves
I don't know how that information translates to performance inside the engine, but I was impressed.
From what I understand, Texaco and Shell have merged on the retail side. In fact, you can use your Texaco credit card at Shell stations and vice-versa.
On the refining side, Texaco and Chevron have merged.
See the following links:
http://www.chevrontexaco.com/news/press/2002/2002-02-13.asp
and
http://www.chevrontexaco.com/about/our_businesses
Hope this helps...
TB
Filters would be Mobil 1, Pure One, Amsoil or Hastings or K&N
Those are old wives tales about synthetics causing problems in higher mileage engines.
I converted my Subbie to Synthetic at 100,000 miles and will continue to use it in that car. I have converted a car that doesn't have good seals to Maxlife after they were replaced. Time will tell if that helps in the long run.
I own a 1999 Cougar with the 2.5 L V6 and 104,000 miles on it. I have always changed the oil every three months (approx. 7-8000 miles), using conventional Mobil 5W-30. This winter the engine developed a rattle for the first 5 to 10 minutes after a cold start. The noise is audible only under load while accelerating thru the gears above about 2500rpm. There is no noise revving the engine in neutral or while driving at a steady speed.
The last oil change I switched to Mobil 1 5W-30 and the noise disappeared immediately and has not returned. Could I have been hearing piston slap or bearing knock? If so, how did the synthetic oil silence the noise? Incidentally, the engine otherwise runs perfectly and uses no oil between changes.
Your diagnosis and advice would be much appreciated.
Thank You
Jerry Agresti
Mr. Detailer, Yes Valvoline is my favorite all-around brand of oil as well. I like their Max-Life oils (expecially when I could get 5 qt. jugs for $5!), I liked (past tense) their Valvoline Synpower when it was a mostly-PAO based formula and I like their All-Climate oil for applications where I want a dino/conventional oil. While Valvoline may not be the best (does anyone know for sure who is?), it is an excellent oil and I've heard fewer complaints about this brand than any other.
Since I am a believer in synthetics, I currently use Red Line oil which is very specialized (mostly racing).
Recently, though, I've found Chevron conventional oil in this area and it is a really high-quality brand. They just don't advertise/market themselves aggressively ... but this keeps their price down. I can get 5W30 and 10W30 Chevron around here for $1.08 per quart which is NOT a sale price. Most other national-brand SL class dino oils are in the $1.60 range. I also use their Delo 400 heavy duty oil for some lawn & garden equipment because its additive package is so strong (this is true of most heavy duty/diesel 15W40s).
--- Bror Jace
--- Bror Jace
[Disclaimer: I work for ChevronTexaco Global Lubricants --- but Edmund's is me NOT my employer]. Chevron actually invented/patented much of the Group II base oil technology widely in use today. Chevron Supreme is the ultimate bargain ... I'd put it up against ANY GF-3 "Starburst" oil. Very, very few competitiors are overblends (i.e. trying to reach more than current requirements by a safe margin --- that is just too complex and costly in most cases). Some oils do have inherent "bonus" properties --- IsoSyn(tm) [Group II] stocks impart additional stability to the oil without any price premium for example.
DELO is the leading HDMO (big truck-diesel) oil.
Havoline is one of the most trusted oils in the industry. Many folks would not use anything else.
Most consumer oils involve a lot of Marketing, and perhaps a bit less "beef" than some would imagine --- especially "botique" brands. Most major PCMOs are pretty good in fact, so good that I *personally* believe the vast majority of consumers changing oil and filters on regular basis cannot tell any material, repeatable differences. I thinks oil handling practices, quality control, and brand reputation are more valuable than the underlying chemisty or specs some enthusiast folk take a deep interest in...but that is just me!
Not sure on Zn & P ... in general I'd eduacated guess same addpacks just vis changes.
Good morning
Rando
I bet the marketing folks for this stuff are a little more computer literate (probably reading this right now...) than the old school folks who assumed that everyone would buy whatever the manufacturer sold (get it cheaper at k/w-mart!!!)because "It was made for that vehicle!" I also think that with the widespread use of synthetic oil and longer change intervals by more home garage mechanics that the filter makers have to take that into consideration much more often now than ever before.
I'm glad that we have more/better choices of what used to be celler level auto products, the existing upper level quality guys are still better but the difference is narrowing, who knows, one of these days Fram may start reading this stuff and jump into the quality game too
see y'all
Rando