Home > Technical (L322) > Oil Additives |
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SKOT Member Since: 24 Oct 2012 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 792 |
I read fabulous reports of Millers additives so I bought some and used it on the whole fleet 1 x petrol SC, 1 x diesel 4x4 and 1 x petrol supermini.
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20th May 2014 5:27pm |
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stan Site Moderator Member Since: 13 Jul 2010 Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation Posts: 35278 |
curious re he poorer mpg Steve, i found the same when i temporarily used branded fuel [more additives?] rather than my usual supermarket stuff.. ... - .- -.
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20th May 2014 5:29pm |
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SKOT Member Since: 24 Oct 2012 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 792 |
Hi Stan,
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20th May 2014 5:40pm |
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steptoe Member Since: 23 Jul 2012 Location: london Posts: 382 |
When was the last time you heard of anyone who uses half decent oil wearing out their engines....
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20th May 2014 6:57pm |
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iphs Member Since: 07 May 2014 Location: Norfolk Posts: 198 |
Thats a very bold statement to make Steptoe, considering the amount of new and reclaimed engines (from accident damaged cars) that are bought and sold. How many engines are in bits in garages right now, having worn parts replaced. Can't all be down to bad servicing.
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20th May 2014 8:20pm |
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dingg1 Member Since: 29 Jun 2013 Location: PORTUGAL Posts: 1340 |
additives keep the purchaser happy , and thats it in a nutshell
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20th May 2014 9:14pm |
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northernmonkeyjones Member Since: 24 Mar 2012 Location: derby Posts: 8508 |
I wouldnt put anything in the engine which wasnt supposed to be there in the first place.
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21st May 2014 6:55am |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8191 |
Don't use Slick50, seen loads of reports about how it actually stops the oil working as it should and increases wear. There claim about the Briggs and Stratton engine, two, one run with it, the other without, then drained both and the one without seized and the other ran for hours was repeated by Briggs and Stratton and found to be exactly the other way round....
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21st May 2014 9:28am |
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Weejock Member Since: 30 Dec 2011 Location: UK Posts: 417 |
I would have thought most modern engines that a being repaired today are due to an underlying original manufacturing fault or neglect by the owner and as steptoe says not from old age wear and tear following proper service schedules unless they have done galactic mileages. For example on the BMW M62 used in the early 4.4 RR the timing chain guides are plastic which break. Doesn't matter what oil you use, if left unfixed the engine will be toast, it's an underlying design issue. Likewise with overheating issues and headgaskets, nothing to do with the oil used or a worn engine but still will kill it. The highest percentage of engine wear comes from cold starts when there is no oil pressure and less oil on the friction surfaces. The less you do of those the better. If you don't do cold starts the engine can run for amazing amounts of mileage with little or no wear. Mobil tested their oil in a continuous running of an E30 BMW back in the 90's. They ran it for 1 million miles over 4 years and found little engine wear. http://www.mobil1.co.nz/performance/miles.aspx Ignore the fact that it's the 'magic' Mobil oil that protected it (actually from tests I've seen there are better oils out there), the same no doubt could be done with similar oils, it's the cold starts that add in the most wear and they knew it, that's why they didn't let it do any! (you would want to guarantee a good result after a 4 year experiment!). Snake oils (additives) in general probably just work be reducing the viscosity of the oil. With a less viscose oil you get less resistance, it's the same as trying to push your hand through water instead of treacle. With a less viscose oil you might see an increase in fuel economy and slightly better performance due to less resistance. The downside is with less viscose oil films on surfaces you are likely to get more wear as it won't protect the surfaces as much, will run away quicker and not be there for cold starts. It's been proven many times in proper tests, by proper tests I mean by genuine independent organisations, that snake oils do not do anything a decent oil doesn't. I'm guilty myself and have used snake oils in my youth when I didn't know any better (is "Slick 50" still going?) but wouldn't touch them now. You just need to use a decent quality fully synthetic oil which passes the relevant standards and is within the grade range recommended. If you want to reduce wear then change the oil more often. If you are dead keen on protecting and getting the most life out of an engine then you could fit a pre-oiling system such as Accusump which stores oil under pressure and releases it immediately on start up. It will do far more good than any additive. Combine that with pre-heating systems to get engine up to operating temperature as quick as possible and follow service schedules with a decent oil then you have an engine that will last for a very long time. |
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21st May 2014 3:02pm |
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iphs Member Since: 07 May 2014 Location: Norfolk Posts: 198 |
Thats a great write up Weejock . I agree that most damage is done when starting from cold but isn't it this sitution that the additives say they protect against
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21st May 2014 4:08pm |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8191 |
Slick50 still for sale in Halfords.... Pete
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21st May 2014 5:01pm |
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ebajema Member Since: 24 Mar 2011 Location: New Plymouth Posts: 4782 |
From what I know about oil (granted that is from the time I did my engineering studies and that is quite some time ago to say it gently), there are additives in there already (put there by the manufacturer) to improve the characteristics of the base oil.
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22nd May 2014 7:27am |
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