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All About Oil
This page is mirrored with permission
Original Page:
http://www.calsci.com/motorcycleinfo/Oils1.html
Copyright © 2003-2007, by
Mark Lawrence.
Email mark@calsci.com
In my search for what oil
to use in my scooters and motorcycles I found many sites, opinions, and
data. This was the one site that I thought answered my questions best. I decided it was worth putting on my site for all that may not find
it at it's normal location. I hope you find it
as informative and useful as I did.
My thanks go out to Mark
for allowing me to post it here! :) - Tim Taylor

I am not a lubrication,
filtering, chemical or mechanical engineer. I have a degree in
engineering, but I studied electrical engineering. I now study physics.
You may feel free to question my abilities to gather facts and draw
conclusions in the area of oils and filters. In any case, this is a
write up of what I learned in about 75 hours of research on this topic.
My only interest is having my motorcycle run forever, never break, and
be easy to maintain.
Why do we need oil?
We put oil in our engines
to serve several purposes. First, obviously, oil acts as a lubricant. If
your engine is operating correctly, there is almost no metal to metal
contact - everything is riding on a thin film of oil. However, oil has
several other important jobs to do. Oil circulates throughout your
engine, and cools parts that cannot get near a water jacket. For
example, it's becoming common in sport bikes to spray oil on the
underside of the piston to cool it. There are no water jackets at all in
your transmission. Motorcycle transmissions are oil cooled.
Your piston rings do not
do a perfect job of sealing. Some combustion by products will slip past
the rings into the engine. This can be little particles of carbon.
Remember, diamond is carbon that was combined under heat and pressure.
These little carbon particles can be quite damaging to your engine.
Another job of your oil is to hold these particles in suspension until
the oil filter can grab them. Also, if your gasoline has sulphur in it
(it does), this sulphur can react with water and oxygen to make
sulphuric acid. This is some stuff that is seriously bad for your
engine. Your oil has special ingredients in it called buffers to
neutralize acids. Finally, your engine can get internal build ups of
tars, waxes, and other gunk. Your oil has solvents to try to dissolve
this stuff and get and keep your engine clean.
Where Oil Comes From
Most of the bio-mass on
earth is single cell plants and microscopic critters in the ocean. When
these die, they sink to the bottom. Often they fall into a deep crevasse
or trench, where they may become covered up by an underwater landslide.
After a couple hundred million years of high pressure and no air, the
critters get squished into oil. So, oil isn't really "dead dinosaurs,"
but Sinclair Oil stations just wouldn't be the same with a picture of
algae on their sign. Today we like to find this stuff, pump it to the
surface, and burn it.
The oil we pump to the
surface is a mixture of gasoline, kerosene, light weight lubricating
oil, motor oil, gear oil, tars, paraffins, waxes, asphalt, sand, dirt,
organic stuff (called aromatics) and the occasional dead cockroach. We
call this stuff crude oil, for reasons that I think are now self-explanitory.
The oil companies have the singularly smelly job of separating the crude
oil into its component parts. A hundred years ago we would just heat the
stuff up in a complicated still, and catch stuff that boiled off at
different temperatures. Fifty years ago we started processing the crude
oil with clay and solvents to do a more precise job. Today, we use very
complicated systems where we heat the crude oil to precise temperatures,
put it under high pressure, and bubble hydrogen and other stuff through
it. The idea of all this is to try to get pure chemicals out of this
stuff that we just found laying around in the desert.
Most motor oil has a lot
of different chemicals in it with very different properties. The
temperature at which the oil will start burning, called the flash
point, is determined by the chemicals that burn at the lowest
temperature. The higher the flash point, the more stable the oil is at
high temperatures, and the less oil your engine will burn. The pour
point is the temperature at which the oil stops flowing like a
liquid. The lower this number is, the better protected your engine is
when it's cold. The thickness of the oil, that is the resistance the oil
offers to motion, is called the viscosity. The viscosity depends
on all of the various chemicals in the oil and how they react to each
other and to heat. Importantly, as the oil heats up, it thins out, that
is the viscosity goes down. The better the oil is at retaining its
viscosity at high temperatures, the higher the viscosity index.
All of these properties depend on all the chemicals in the oil. If you
could get only one precise kind of molecule out of the raw oil, you
could do a lot better than you can do with a mix.
Refining Oil
The oil product you buy
starts as a base oil. The base oil makes up about 85% of the oil
you buy. The base oil can be refined from crude oil, chemically
(synthetically) manufactured, or a blended combination.
Base oils that are
refined from crude oil are colorless and pretty much odorless and are
sold to the public as mineral oil. The crude oil is a combination of a
lot of different chemicals, ranging from light gasoline types of fuels
to waxes and tars. When you heat the crude oil, the gasoline and diesel
oil boil off pretty early. Unfortunately, the mineral oil, paraffin, wax
and tar molecules are all hooked up with each other, and it's not so
easy to separate them from each other. Also, the crude oil contains the
aforementioned aromatics, which are quite bad in your oil: they are very
reactive, and when oxidized they cause all kinds of problems. Refining
oil means trying to remove the bad stuff, while leaving the good stuff.
The more bad stuff we remove, the better the oil works.
The simplest way to
refine oil is to process it with a clay, a material a lot like kitty
litter. The clay will soak up much of the aromatics and sulphur and
nitrogen compounds. Then, you dilute the oil with solvent like MEK
(Methyl-Ethyl-Keytone) and/or Toluene (that's the stuff in model
airplane glue that's so popular with teenagers), and freeze the oil. The
good stuff will mostly stay liquid, and the waxes will solidify and can
then be filtered out. This clay-solvent refining process has been around
since about 1930.
Oils refined with the
clay-solvent process contain a fair amount of paraffin and wax. These
molecules cause several problems in an engine: they sometimes fall out
of solution, leading to buildups in your engine that must be cleaned out
somehow. Also, as these molecules get hot they thin out quite a bit,
much more than mineral oil, so they make the oil's high temperature
performance rather poor. Finally, at low temperatures the waxes and
paraffins thicken the oil so much that you really couldn't call it a
lubricant. If you're curious about this, buy a cheap quart of straight
30wt oil and put it in your refrigerator or freezer over night. You'll
be amazed at how thick it becomes. More than half the motor oil sold in
N.America in 2004 is made from base oils refined with the clay- solvent
process (I like to call it the Kitty-litter and Kerosene refining
method), but I don't think this is the type of oil you want to put into
an engine you love. These oils are roughly 85% good stuff (oil) and 15%
bad stuff (paraffin and wax). To put this in perspective, think of
taking a gallon of really excellent oil, and melting a 12" dinner candle
into it.
In 1959, Chevron
developed a new method of refining base oils called Hydrocracking, where
you process the raw oil at high temperatures and pressures with hydrogen
and various catalysts. In Hydrocracking, many of the paraffin and wax
molecules are broken up into mineral oil molecules, which increases the
performance of the base oil dramatically. Also, far more of the
aromatics and sulphur and nitrogen compounds are removed from the oil.
Since 1990, Chevron's
process has been improved. In 1993, Chevron invented the Hydro-Isomerization
process, where wax and paraffin molecules are reshaped into useful
lubricants instead of simply being broken up into smaller molecules. By
increasing the severity of the hydrocracking process, increasing the
temperature and pressure and processing time to process more and more of
the unwanted wax and paraffin molecules, the oil's low and high
temperature performance and resistance to oxidation can be improved to
the point where the distinction between mineral oils and synthetics
becomes blurred. Chevron now licenses this process, called Iso- DeWaxing.
This process of oil refining is becoming more and more popular, and in
2004 accounts for almost half of all base oils. Iso- DeWaxing not only
produces much higher-performance oil, but also allows you to start with
lower quality crude oil, making us less dependent on the few countries
that happen to produce the purest crude oils.
Group II and Group III oils
Base oils made with the
Iso-DeWaxing process are called Group II, and are significantly more
pure and have higher performance than Group I base oils. Chevron Delo
400, Mobil Delvac 1300, and Shell Rotella are made from pure Group II
oils. Motor oils made with Group-II base oils leave far fewer wax and
tar deposits in your engine, and have much better low and high
temperature performance than Group I oils. The resulting oils are
roughly 97% good stuff (oil) and 3% bad stuff (paraffin and wax). We
just cut that 12" dinner candle down to about 2½".
The high and low
temperature performance of oils are described by the Viscosity Index.
The VI tells us how much the oil thins out as it gets hot. Oils with
higher VIs maintain their viscosity better at high temperatures. If the
VI is 90 to 100, we call it Group II; if it's refined to a VI of 110 to
115 we call it Group IIa. In the late '90s, an even more involved
process was invented yielding base oils with VIs over 120. These base
oils are called Group III or "unconventional base oils." The
higher the VI, the fewer additives are necessary to achieve the required
viscosity. For example fewer additives are needed to turn a Group III
base oil into 10w-40 than are required for Group II base oils. Group III
oils have essentially no paraffin and wax in them, at least as compared
to the 12" dinner candle per gallon in Group I oils.
Group III oils have
properties approaching or equaling synthetics, so long as the
temperature is above about 40°. Group III based oils are often claimed
to not perform as well as synthetics in a couple ways: their low
temperature performance is not nearly as good, it is sometimes claimed
on the basis of the "ball bearing test" that they offer lower impact
resistance, and since their flash point is slightly lower it is claimed
that they burn off more easily. However, most modern engines are
water-cooled, so it's hard to see how the slightly better flash points
of the synthetics ever come into play. I personally don't make a habit
of dropping a handful of ball bearing into my oil pan, so I'm not
completely clear on what the impact tests mean to me. The low
temperature performance of the Group III oils can be improved enormously
by blending in a relatively small amount of synthetic base stock and
other additives.
Since about 2000, it has
become possible at moderate extra cost to process Group II and Group III
oils so that their performance below 32° nearly matches the performance
of traditional synthetics. Because of this, the oil companies found they
could now produce relatively inexpensive 5w-30 and 0w-20 oils. Car
companies were quick to see that such oils would help reduce the fuel
consumption of their vehicles by a percent or so, which is important as
Detroit finds themselves selling more trucks than cars. So, these
"fuel-efficient" oils are quickly becoming the factory recommendation in
most cars. It's not at all clear that these new low- viscosity oils lead
to the longest engine life, but it is clear that these oils help the car
companies meet their CAFE federally- mandated fuel economy standards.
In the late 1990s,
Castrol started selling an oil made from Group III base oil and called
it SynTec Full Synthetic. Mobil sued Castrol, asserting that this oil
was not synthetic, but simply a highly refined petroleum oil, and
therefore it was false advertising to call it synthetic. In 1999, Mobil
lost their lawsuit. It was decided that the word "synthetic" was a
marketing term and referred to properties, not to production methods or
ingredients. Castrol continues to make SynTec out of Group III base
oils, that is highly purified mineral oil with most all of the cockroach
bits removed.
Shortly after Mobil lost
their lawsuit, most oil companies started reformulating their synthetic
oils to use Group III base stocks instead of PAOs or diester stocks as
their primary component. Most of the "synthetic oil" you can buy today
is actually mostly made of this highly-distilled and purified dino-juice
called Group III oil. Group III base oils cost about half as much as the
synthetics. By using a blend of mostly Group III oils and a smaller
amount of "true" synthetics, the oil companies can produce a product
that has nearly the same properties as the "true" synthetics, and nearly
the same cost as the Group III oil. The much more expensive traditional
synthetics are now available in their pure forms only in more expensive
and harder to obtain oils. To the best of my knowledge, Delvac-1,
AMSOil, Redline, and Motul 5100 are the only oils made from pure
traditional synthetics.
Synthetic Oils
Synthetic oils were
originally designed for the purpose of having a very pure base oil with
excellent properties. By starting from scratch and building up your oil
molecules from little pieces, you can pretty much guarantee that every
molecule in the oil is just like every other molecule, and therefore the
properties are exactly what you designed in, not compromised by
impurities from dead cockroach shells or whatever. Synthetics were thus
originally a reaction to the relatively poor refining processes
available from about 1930 to about 1990. The original synthetics were
designed for the Army Air Force in WW II. They simply could not make
their high- performance turbo-charged radial engines stay alive on the
available motor oils of the time.
One process for making
synthetic base oils is to start with a chemical called an olefin, and
make new molecules by attaching them to each other in long chains, hence
"poly." The primary advantage of Poly-Alpha-Olefin "PAO" base oil
is that all the molecules in the base oil are pretty much identical, so
it's easy to get the base oil to behave exactly as you like. PAOs are
called Group IV base oils.
Until about 2000, these
PAO base oils had an enormous advantage over mineral base oils in low
temperature performance and in resistance to oxidation, which is
critical in keeping the oil from forming acids. However, modern
group-III oils can nearly match the performance of PAOs at about half
the price. Because of this, PAO based oils are rapidly disappearing.
There are new processes being investigated which may significantly cut
the cost of producing PAOs, and make them an important component of oil
again.
Another type of base oil
is made from refined and processed esters and is called Group V. Esters
start life as fatty acids in plants and animals, which are then
chemically combined into esters, diesters, and polyesters. Your
vegetarian girlfriend should love that. Group V base stocks are the most
expensive of all to produce. However, the esters are polar molecules and
have very significant solvent properties - an ester base oil all by
itself will do a very decent job of keeping your engine clean. So,
people who are serious about making a superior oil will usually mix some
Group V oils into their base stock.
PolyEster (RedLine) oils
have by far the best performance in extreme high temperatures, and are
the preferred oil in old "air- cooled" Nortons. I put "air-cooled" in
parenthesis as one could also call these engines "prayer- cooled." The
Norton 750 commando will destroy a Group I oil fill in 75 miles on a 100
degree day. No kidding. The Brits really did not understand until about
1990 that some of us live in places where the temperatures get over 80
degrees and cities are more than 10 miles apart. If you love those old
British twins, you need to find a good supply for RedLine oil.
Finally, there are new
chemicals emerging which are made from liquefied natural gas called GTL
(gas to liquid) base oils. These will be called Group III+, and many
people think they will become an important part of the oils you buy by
2010. These GTL base oils have natural VIs of 140 or more, meaning for
most applications they won't require any VII package at all. Natural gas
is primarily made up of only one type of molecule, so the refining is
already done for you. Most oil wells throw off a lot of natural gas. In
many cases, it's more expensive to transport this gas to a large city
than the gas is worth, so it's just burned off. For example, Iran burns
off enough natural gas each day to power their entire country,
electricity, cars, ships, airplanes, the whole thing. So the next time
you hear Iran's nuclear reactors are purely for peaceful production of
energy, you can wonder like the rest of us why a country that burns off
more than their entire energy needs must spend tens of billions of
dollars developing alternative energy sources. Well, anyway, natural gas
is a chemical looking for a use. All you have to do is chemically attach
these molecules to each other to turn them into quite pure oil stocks.
"Semi-synthetics"
are oils which are a blend of petroleum oil and no more than 30%
synthetic oil. If the manufacturer adds no more than 30% synthetic oil
and does not change the additive package, they do not have to recertify
the oil. These days, since everyone has agreed that Group III base oils
are "synthetic," I'm not sure "semi-synthetic" means anything at all.
The manufacturers love this stuff: it costs about 15% more to make the
oil, and they get to charge about double. I don't recommend
semi-synthetics. Save your money and take your kids to McDonalds.
| |
Group I Mineral Oils |
Group II Mineral Oils |
Group III Mineral Oils |
Group IV PAOs |
Group V Diesters
|
|
Base Oil |
Visc-
osity |
Flash
Point |
Pour
Point |
VI |
Visc-
osity |
Flash
Point |
Pour
Point |
VI |
Visc-
osity |
Flash
Point |
Pour
Point |
VI |
Visc-
osity |
Flash
Point |
Pour
Point |
VI |
Visc-
osity |
Flash
Point |
Pour
Point |
VI |
|
100 Neutral |
4.1 |
380 |
+15°F |
97 |
4.1 |
410 |
+20°F |
102 |
4.2 |
410 |
+25°F |
127 |
3.8 |
437 |
-92°F |
123 |
3.6 |
460 |
-67°F |
148 |
|
200 Neutral |
6.1 |
420 |
+15°F |
96 |
6.4 |
435 |
+25°F |
103 |
7.0 |
460 |
+20°F |
135 |
5.9 |
469 |
-83°F |
135 |
5.5 |
485 |
-65°F |
150 |
|
325 Neutral |
8.4 |
435 |
+15°F |
95 |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
8.4 |
507 |
-74°F |
132 |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
450 Neutral |
10 |
455 |
+15°F |
95 |
12 |
500 |
+20°F |
101 |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
9.5 |
527 |
-85°F |
130 |
--- |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
As you can see in the
table above, synthetics offer real advantages when your engine is very
cold and when your engine is very hot. The viscosity numbers shown above
are at 212°F. At 32°F the PAOs and Diesters have about one third the
viscosity of the mineral oils, meaning they pump through your engine
three times better. Since about 75% of all the wear on your engine
happens in the first five minutes after you start it up, synthetics
offer an advantage in significantly reducing engine wear.
Making Multi-Grade Oil
A simple standard oil,
for example a pure base stock, would be a single weight, like 30 weight.
This pure oil would have no detergent additives to keep the engine
clean. This oil would be relatively thick and difficult to pour at room
temperature, and would thin out as the motor heated up. On a very cold
day, say 10° below freezing, this oil would thicken to the point where
you could not start your motor, and if you did, the oil pump could not
pump the oil around to protect your motor. It used to be that to start
their diesel trucks in the winter, truckers would add kerosene to their
oil to thin it out. Then they had to hope the kerosene would burn off
before it did any real damage. Today, synthetic oils that are rated
0W-40 flow normally down to 65° below zero and remove the need for
engine block heaters or adding kerosene.
An oil sold as 10w-40 is
no thicker than 10 weight oil under Winter (10w) conditions, meaning
below freezing. The 40 means it is no thinner than 40 weight oil at 212°
Fahrenheit. So, the first number tells us the performance of the oil at
or below the temperature of freezing water, and the second number tells
us the performance at the temperature of boiling water. The chemicals
added to the oil to accomplish this are called Viscosity Index Improvers
(VIIs).
To make a 10w-40 oil, the
manufacturer would start out with a 10 weight oil as the base stock. All
by itself, this oil would thin out so much at normal operating
temperatures that the oil film would be useless. So, they add these very
special very long molecules, the VIIs. The VII molecules are as much as
1000 times as long as an oil molecule. The VII molecules curl up in a
little ball at room temperature, but as the temperature gets higher they
uncurl and stretch out, like a cat sleeping in the sunlight. The more
stretched out the molecule is, the more it impedes the normal flow of
the oil, thus raising the effective viscosity. Now, this sounds just a
little too good to be true. Well, there are two catches: first, these
molecules are not lubricants, so the more of them that you add the less
oil you have sitting around lubricating things. Secondly, these VII
molecules can be broken into pieces by various pressures and forces,
like being squeezed through the transmission gears in a motorcycle or
the hydraulic valves in a diesel engine. Every time a VII molecule gets
broken, the oil loses some of its high temperature viscosity. Synthetic
oils made from pure PAOs and/or Diesters typically have very few VIIs,
so these oils are far less subject to viscosity breakdown due to
shearing of the VII package. As a result, synthetics are far more stable
in a motorcycle engine.
10w-30 oil increases its
viscosity at high temperatures by a factor of three, which requires a
significant amount of these VII molecules. 10w-40 oil increases its high
temperature viscosity by a factor of four, which requires even more even
longer molecules. 20w-50, which sounds a lot like 10w-40, only increases
its high temperature viscosity by a factor of two and a half, so it
requires fewer of these molecules than even 10w-30. 15w-40 also
increases its high temperature viscosity by about two and a half, so
this oil is also substantially more stable than 10w-40. Most passenger
car oils today use inexpensive VII molecules that break apart relatively
easily. Conversely, most diesel engine oil VIIs are chosen from more
expensive chemicals that are more shear stable, since an oil change in a
large diesel is expected to last for 15,000 to 150,000 miles.
One way to judge the VII
content of your oil is to read the VI, the Viscosity Index, at the
manufacturer's web page. The base oils all have similar VIs to start
with, so generally speaking, the higher the VI in the blended oil, the
more VIIs are present, and the less suitable the oil is for motorcycle
usage. John Evans did just such a survey of Valvoline, Chevron, Exxon,
Quaker State, Citgo, and Conoco oils. He found that the 5w-30 oils all
had VI's in the range of 158-162; the 5w-20 oils had VIs of 148-154; the
10w-40 oils had VIs of 147 to 150; 10w-30 oils had VIs of 134 to 139;
and 20w-50 oils had VIs of 120 to 125.
In 1994, Dr. John Woolum
tested the viscosity of several 10w-40 oils in his motorcycle. He found
that all of the petroleum oils had lost highly significant amounts of
viscosity within 1500 miles. Only Mobil-1 held up in his test. I have
personally tested Delvac-1 synthetic in my ST1300. It was 5w-40 when I
put it in, and 5w-25 9,200 miles later. By 1500 miles, the petroleum
oils Dr. Woolum tested were at 10w-25 equivalent. By contrast, Dr.
Woolum tested a petroleum oil in his Honda Accord. After 3600 miles, the
10w-40 oil was 10w-37 equivalent. Motorcycles are indeed significantly
harder on their oils than cars. Based on this result and the VI numbers
above, it would seem that 10w-40, 5w-20, and 5w-30 oils cannot be safely
used in motorcycles for more than 1,000 to 1,500 miles.
You might ask, if these
viscosity index improvers are so expensive and fragile, why have them?
Why not just run a straight 30 weight oil? If you live somewhere where
the temperature never changes, like Maui, maybe that's a good idea.
However, if your engine will ever see temperatures below 60 degrees or
above 100 degrees, it's important to have a multi-weight oil.
Multi-weight oils offer far superior protection during a cold engine
start on a cold morning, and they also offer superior protection if your
engine oil ever gets above about 230°. Of course, some old timers will
tell you, "I always ran straight 50 weight oil. Yup. That was the stuff.
All these new-fangled fancy oils, forget it, it's just marketing hype.
All you need is straight 50 weight." Well, that may have been true when
motorcycles were 1500ccs and made 18hp. Today, when you can casually buy
an engine that makes 150hp per liter, things are just a little
different.
Viscosity is not actually
measured in "weights", but rather in units called "Stokes." If you're a
famous scientist they name a unit after you, except for poor Albert who
is considered famous enough all by himself. Stokes was a guy who worked
on fluid flow. For oils, we use a hundredth of a Stoke, called a centi-Stoke,
abbreviated cSt. "Weights" are a classification invented by the American
Petroleum Institute (API). A different unit of viscosity, the centi-Poise,
is used at very low and very high temperatures. 10 weight oil refers to
oils within a range of viscosities, so two different brands of 10 weight
oil might actually be quite different. 75 weight gear oil is actually
about the same viscosity as 10 weight motor oil. Don't ask me why, I'm
not a petroleum engineer; although some might argue that I do belong in
an institution.
SAE W viscosity grades for engine oils
|
Grade |
cranking |
pumping |
|
0w |
3250cP at -30°c |
60,000cP at -40°c |
|
5w |
3500cP at -25°c |
60,000cP at -35°c |
|
10w |
3500cP at -20°c |
60,000cP at -30°c |
|
15w |
3500cP at -15°c |
60,000cP at -25°c |
|
20w |
4500cP at -10°c |
60,000cP at -20°c |
|
25w |
6000cP at -5°c |
60,000cP at -15°c |
|
SAE viscosity grades for engine oils
|
Grade |
low shear |
high shear |
|
20 |
5.6 - 9.3 cSt at 100°c |
2.6 cP at 150°c |
|
30 |
9.3 - 12.5 cSt at 100°c |
2.9 cP at 150°c |
|
40a |
12.5 - 16.3 cSt at 100°c |
2.9 cP at 150°c |
|
40b |
12.5 - 16.3 cSt at 100°c |
3.7 cP at 150°c |
|
50 |
16.3 - 21.9 cSt at 100°c |
3.7 cP at 150°c |
|
60 |
21.9 - 26.1 cSt at 100°c |
3.7 cP at 150°c |
a (0w-40, 5w-40, 10w-40
grades)
b (15w-40, 20w-40, 25w-40, 40 grades) |
The "High Shear"
viscosity number is the one that actually correlates with oil film
thickness on your bearings at operating temperature. You can see that,
based on this, really there's only three choices for oil: 20; 30 or
light 40; heavy 40 to 60. The cranking viscosities above show you the
temperature at which you can start your engine safely. 20w oils are only
safe down to about 28°f. 5W Rotella or Mobil-1 SUV oil are safer at
-13°f than 20W is at 28°f.
Motor Oil Additive Packages
In addition to the base
stock oil, oil manufacturers add what's called an additive package.
Additive packages are typically not made up by the oil companies, but
rather by a few companies that then sell them. Additive packages contain
several different chemicals with several different purposes. Here's what
the additive package is supposed to do for you:
 |
One component is
detergents and dispersants. These chemicals are designed to hold onto
foreign particles and chemicals in your engine, and sometimes break
them into smaller pieces. These foreign chemicals may be combustion by
products, or junk that slipped past your air filter. If the particles
are large enough, then they will eventually be grabbed by the oil
filter and taken out of circulation. |
 |
Another component is
buffers. This is typically calcium, magnesium, or boron. These
chemicals are present to neutralize any acids which form in your
engine. Acids are bad for your bearings and other important thingies.
|
 |
Your additive package
will include solvents to break up deposits of tar and wax. In a
premium oil, some of the base stock will be Group V diesters to help
the solvent package. Where did the tar and wax come from? Remember,
when you opened up your $1.09 quart of Spiffo-Magic SuperLube, you got
oil, additives, tar, paraffin, wax, asphalt, ash, aromatics (sounds
like perfume when they say that, doesn't it?), and the occasional
stray bit of cockroach shell. |
 |
Another component is
emergency lubricants. This is typically zinc, phosphorous, and
molybdenum. These chemicals are present in case your oil film
completely breaks down, due to extreme temperatures or pressures.
These chemicals are supposed to be a last resort defense against metal
to metal contact in your engine. Oil companies are cutting back on
zinc and phosphorous, as these metals are hard on your catalytic
converters. They're substituting molybdenum disulfide, which lowers
friction and improves gas mileage. It also causes problems for people
with wet clutches, that is most motorcycles. |
 |
The Viscosity Index
Improvers are part of the additive package. As we learned above, these
chemicals are present to make your oil stay thick at high
temperatures. |
 |
Finally, corrosion
inhibitors. These chemicals are supposed to keep your oil from
oxidizing or otherwise breaking down due to time or contamination.
Yes, it's true, now even your oil has to take antioxidants.
|
API Oil Standards
The additive package is
made to make the finished oil product meet one of the certifications.
There are two classes of certification: S, for Service, and C, for
commercial. The
certification standards are maintained by the API, the American
Petroleum Institute. Over the years, the API has improved and changed
these standards. The most current S standards are SL and SM. These
standards differ from earlier standards like SH by lowering phosphorus
to improve catalytic converter life, and increasing molybdenum to lower
internal engine friction and improve gas mileage. Phosphorus was
originally added to oils to help protect high pressure areas like cam
lobes and crankshaft bearings, so lowering phosphorus levels is a
compromise of lower pollution, perhaps at the expense of engine life.
Molybdenum is added to improve fuel economy due to the federal CAFE
(Corporate Average Fuel Economy) standards, thereby helping GM and Ford
keep selling large V8s to the American public, but can perhaps cause
problems in engines with wet clutches. Most S additive packages are also
designed to be inexpensive so that the resulting oil can be sold at a
low price. SL and SM oils are both low phosphorus; SM oils which are
labeled "energy conserving" are high molybdenum.
About every three years
or so, the API releases a new S standard. The new standard supercedes
the old standard, so, for example, the SH standard included extra high
temperature deposit protection due to the popularity of turbo engines in
the early '90s; SJ oils did not have this high temperature protection,
as that portion of the standard was dropped. This means that for some
cars, oils made to the older rating systems are sometimes better than
oils made to the new standards. SH certified oils are probably the best
of the S oils for motorcycles and high- performance sports cars, but you
pretty much can't buy them anymore. Oils which are labeled "energy
conserving" are bad for any vehicle with a wet clutch, meaning most
motorcycles. Essentially all 0w-20, 5w-30, and 10w-30 oils are energy
conserving and should not be used in your bike.
Most people blending S
type automotive oils are buying their base oils from a company who is
most likely using the Chevron Iso- DeWaxing process to make their oils,
then buying their additive package from another company that is highly
constrained by the API standards. The cost of getting an API
certification for a single S motor oil formulation is from $125,000 to
$300,000. The cost for C certification is $275,000 to $500,000. Once
testing is complete, the oil can be licensed for $825 per year, plus a
small royalty fee per gallon sold for all gallons over one million. The
length of time between new specifications is now approximately 2 to 3
years, which does not allow a great deal of time to recover testing
costs.
Additive companies, such
as Lubrizol, Ethyl, Infinium and Oronite develop licensed additive
formulas that they offer to oil companies to re-license. It is
inexpensive to re-license one of these formulas, and the majority of oil
companies choose to do this to avoid the costs associated with testing.
Thus, the same chemistry is being sold under many brand names. Because
of this, S type automotive oils have pretty much turned into a
commodity. Although the people selling a particular brand may wish you
to believe their oil is superior to any other, in fact if it's got the
API seal on it, it's probably about the same as any other similarly
rated automotive oil.
Commercial (Diesel) Oil
The additive packages for
C (commercial) certification are designed to promote engine life. The
additive packages for C rated oils contain extra buffers and detergents
to keep the engine clean and free of acids. C rated oils are far better
than S oils at holding and dispersing combustion byproducts and other
contaminants, and at not becoming acidic. Traditionally these oils are
primarily used in diesel motors, which are very expensive and are
expected to last a million miles or more. When an engine rebuild costs
$10,000 - $15,000 and puts you out of work for a week or three, you
don't mind paying a bit more for your oil. The C certification tests
have been largely developed by Mack, Caterpillar, Detroit and Cummins to
provide the additives necessary to keep these engines running a long
time. The latest commercial certification is CI-4 Plus, which includes
extra protection for high temperature high revving motors. Since it's
designed for diesel motors, they don't care about no stinkin' catalytic
thingies, and CAFE is a place where you get a cup of joe and a donut.
CI-4 Plus differs from CI-4 with higher detergent requirements and
better sheer stability. The shear stability is exactly what motorcycles
need due to running the engine oil through the transmission.
Although C standards are
changed every few years, the older standards are enhanced, not
superceded. So, newer higher rated C oils are simply better than older
lower rated oils.
Although few car owners
test their oil regularly, most large trucking companies routinely do oil
analysis on their diesel trucks. Used oils are checked for viscosity
breakdown, for detergent and dispersant function, and for metal
contamination that would indicate engine wear. C oils that don't measure
up are quickly run off the market place. To prevent engine wear, the
best strategy is to keep deposits off the pistons, rings, and bearings.
Therefore, diesel oils typically contain half again more detergents,
double the dispersants, and a much more expensive and robust VII package
than S type oils. If you go to an auto parts store, convenience store,
or grocery store, you'll see that there are dozens of brands of
automotive oils, all claiming to be the best. If you look at truck
stops, you'll see there are only a very few diesel oils sold, typically
Rotella, Delo, and Delvac. Trucking companies find what works for them
and won't switch. They're not interested in saving a dollar a gallon on
some unknown oil.
The C certified oils are
all also S certified, just as some S certified oils are also C
certified. The best C certified oils are SG, usually SH, sometimes SJ. I
don't know of a C certified oil which is SL. The best S certified oils
are CF, which is a relatively old and obsolete C standard, and does not
include the tests for high speed high temperature engines that CG, CH,
and CI have. In fact, CF oil does not meet the current factory standards
for Volkswagen or Mercedes diesel passenger cars.
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The API charges
serious money to test an oil and certify it. If the API really
tested the oil in their independent lab, and the oil company pays
their royalties on time, the oil company gets to display the API
seal on their product. Some smaller companies don't pay the API to
test their oils and certify them. In these cases, you won't see the
API seal, instead you'll see some words like "Meets or exceeds all
manufacturers warranty requirements. API Service SJ, SL, CF." It's
up to you to decide if you trust this manufacturer to actually test
their oil themselves and tell you the truth about the results.
|
|
 |
JASO certified Oil
Another institute that
certifies oils is called the Japanese Automotive Standards Organization,
JASO. One wonders why this Japanese organization has an English name. .
. In any case, they have two classifications for motorcycles, "MA" and
"MB." MA is the one you want. MB is like the API SL category, it's got
all those nasty friction reducing chemicals that may scare your clutch
into misbehaving. Again, there is an official JASO seal if the oil has
been independently tested. The seal is a rectangle; in the upper quarter
of the rectangle will be a serial number, and the lower three quarters
will just have the letters MA. If the oil manufacturer did their own
testing, instead you'll see just words like "Meets or exceeds JASO MA
standards."
Some manufacturers
recommend JASO-MA certified oil. AMSOil and Golden Spectro are JASO-MA
certified. Some people consider this important. Interestingly, although
Honda recommends a JASO-MA oil, Honda oil is not JASO-MA certified.
Mostly JASO-MA is pretty much equivalent to SH. In fact, the JASO spec
is mostly a reaction to the decrease in zinc-phosphates in SJ and SL
oils, and the added molybdenum disulfide in energy conserving oils.
Personally, I don't care about JASO standards - they're really not on my
radar.
Racing Oil, NASCAR oil, etc.
Some manufacturers also
sell something they call "racing oil." Normally, this is actually fairly
decent oil, but you should not be mislead into thinking racing cars use
the best oils for you. Race drivers start their engine one time only,
warm it up slowly and carefully, then run the engine near or at the red
line for a couple hours. 100 to 500 miles later, they completely tear
down the engine and replace all the worn parts, the oil, and the oil
filter. If you think you might like to go more than 500 miles between
major engine rebuilds, you might consider that your use of your engine
is quite different from Michael Andretti's.
Why do we change our oil?
We're now in a position
to discuss this. Your oil is a combination of one or more base oils and
a complicated additive package. The base oils will actually last as long
as your motorcycle - many hundreds of thousands of miles, several years.
The reason we change our oil is the additive package wears out. The
buffers get used up neutralizing acids. The detergents and dispersants
get used up clinging to gunk that's too small for your oil filter to
pick out. The VII package gets shredded by your transmission. You could
imagine a device that pulled out your oil, gave it a very thorough
cleaning, replaced the buffers, detergents, and VII molecules, and put
it back into your engine. Sort of a motor oil dialysis machine. However,
in a country that has Texas and Alaska, in a world where oil is $30 /
barrel, this makes no sense. So, we dump out our entire four quarts of
oil because 3% of the oil is used up. It's really just a cheap way of
getting a bunch of contaminants out of our engine. This is why it does
make sense to recycle oil: if you can process the oil hundreds of
gallons at a time, you can separate out the base stocks economically. If
you use synthetic oils and bring your used oil to a recycling collection
point, you can feel especially good: a bunch of school buses and city
buses are going to get an extra little kick in their base oil because of
you. In fact, you can tell your wife that's why you need this exotic,
expensive synthetic oil: it's solely out of your concern for the
children. If everybody used Spiffo-Magic SuperLube the recycled oil
would be junk, and in no time flat the school buses would all break down
and the kids would have to walk to school, 23 miles, in the snow, uphill
both ways. Why, in no time flat the kids would lose weight, improve
their cardiovascular conditioning, and just generally be more healthy
and have more energy. What a nightmare!
Choosing an Oil for Your Motorcycle
There are a few special
problem areas for motorcycle oil. Most motorcycles have wet clutches,
which means the motor oil runs through the clutch. If the motor oil has
too much molybdenum in it, there are fears that the clutch can start
slipping. No one I know has ever actually had this happen to them, but
the warnings are all over your owners' manual and the oil companies' web
pages. On the back of all certified oil cans is a circular stamp with
the certification. Avoid oils that say "energy conserving" in the bottom
half of the donut. These oils contain friction modifier additives that
could cause clutch slipping over time. Essentially all 0w-20, 5w-30 and
10w-30 oils are energy conserving, and should not be used in your
motorcycle.
Most motorcycles run the
engine oil through the transmission, and the transmission gears are very
hard on the oil's VII package. This means that over a couple thousand
miles, the oil's viscosity can break down. Standard car oils are only
good for typically 1500 miles before they've lost about half of their
viscosity. Remember, 10w-40 oils contain a lot of VIIs which tend to
shear in your transmission, so I believe 10w-40 oils should be avoided.
You can't use 10w-30 because of the friction modifiers. This doesn't
leave much. Commercial 15w-40 oils are a good choice, because they have
relatively few VIIs which are the more expensive shear-stable sort.
Synthetics typically don't contain much of a VII package, so shear is
not as big an issue with them.
Some people use their
motorcycles only sporadically. This means the oil can all drain
completely into the sump, leaving no protective film on the bearings.
The first start after a long period of non-use can be particularly hard
on an engine. Film strength is very important if you're a sporadic
rider.
There are several key
advantages to using Synthetic Oils:
Synthetic oils have a
higher viscosity index than mineral base oils. Synthetics have better
resistance to thinning at high temperatures and thickening at low
temperatures. Since synthetics have little or no VIIs, synthetics last
longer in service without radical changes in viscosity.
Synthetics have a much
higher film strength than petroleum oils, so it takes a lot longer for
the oil to drain completely off your bearings and into your sump.
Diester synthetics are
polar molecules with solvent properties which dissolve residues and
combustion byproducts.
Choosing a Break-In Oil for Your
Motorcycle
The theory that synthetic
oils should not be used during break in is the same as the theory that
your engine will break in better if you use synthetic oil but add a
dinner candle to your four quarts of engine oil. Frankly, I find this
theory, um, questionable. Oh, hell, laughable. Corvettes and Porsches
come from the factory with Mobil-1 in their engines. Remember, these
engineers have designed world-champion engines for F1, Indy, Le Mans 24
hours, etc.
There's a lot of
mythology surrounding break-in oil. It's simply not the case that
synthetic oils are more "slippery" than conventional oils. Also,
break-in of a modern engine is completely different than break-in of an
engine made before about 1980. Modern engines, by comparison to
something made in the '60s, are pretty much already broken in from the
factory due to the fact that today we hold much tighter machining
tolerances. The exception, of course, would be the Ural, a motorcycle
made on a production line unmodified since about 1935.
I recommend you change
your break-in oil at 75 to 100 miles, 100 to 150 kilometers. Your engine
does shed a fair amount of metal particles in the first 20-50 miles, and
I really can't understand why you would want this stuff floating around
your bearings for the first 600 miles, 1000 kilometers.
I put Shell Rotella
"synthetic" (87% group III) oil in my DL650 at 75 miles. It burns no
oil, gets great gas mileage, and runs great. I recommend you switch to a
good synthetic at your first oil change.
Recommendations
I get a lot of email, "My
buddy has 283,000 miles on his Yamazuki 867 Nintruder, and he's never
used anything but 35¢ per quart grocery store oil changed every 48,000
miles." Here's the truth: modern Japanese engines are amazingly well
engineered and can tolerate a surprising amount of abuse. However,
putting automotive oils in your motorcycle and running them for more
than 1500 miles is abuse. I abuse my motorcycle enough with the way I
ride them without adding on the abuse of using cheap oil that will break
down in 1500 miles.
The question of which oil
is best is not settled. We know what we want: the oil is inexpensive,
lasts a long time, and makes our engine never break. There are various
articles in MCN which do a chemical analysis and make recommendations
based on the content of the additive package. I am very skeptical of
this, as the utility of these chemicals at various levels is never
tested, and the base oils are not tested. There are a couple articles
that actually test for viscosity breakdown, and standard petroleum oils
don't do very well. Consumer Reports once did a 4,500,000 mile test of
oils in NYC taxicabs, however these engines only start once per day and
are water-cooled, so they mostly avoid cold start-ups and overheating.
If you're using a standard automotive petroleum oil in your motorcycle
and running it for more than 1,500 miles, you are taking your chances.
By 1,500 miles, the VII additives are pretty much all broken down, and
the oil has therefore thinned out enormously.
Your engine will not
explode if you use Spiffo-Magic Superlube for 4,000 miles. Your engine
will not explode if you never use synthetic oils. However, any of these
choices puts additional strain on your engine. You buy $65 tires for
your car that last 45,000 miles, and $100 tires for your bike that last
8,000 miles. Why on earth would you try to save $5 on each oil change to
buy an oil that can't hold up in a motorcycle engine? My DL650 runs its
oil through the transmission, I run off-road (extreme environment due to
silicon blow-by at the piston rings), I'm pretty much always revving my
engine at 5500 rpm or more (red line on the Corvette, the one that comes
with Mobil-1 as factory fill). I stress my little engine enough without
making it use dinner candles as lubricants. Nor do I wish to make the
bearings run in 10w-40 oil that's broken down to 10w-15 oil.
Some people should, in my opinion,
clearly use a synthetic oil. You should be using a synthetic if:
 |
you routinely start
your engine in temperatures under 40°f, 5°c. |
 |
you live somewhere
where it gets below -35 degrees, and you want to start your car. In
this case you must use either Mobil-1 0w-30 or the Canadian 0w-40
Rotella. If you're riding your bike in -40 degrees, I want a picture
just before you die. |
 |
you leave your vehicle
sit unused for months at a time. |
 |
you are unable or
unwilling to change your oil within 2000 miles. |
 |
you have one of these
new 4-stroke MX bikes. These MX bikes hold only about one quart of
oil, all of them have marginal cooling systems, and if there's a more
severe use of an engine than MX, I don't want to be physically present
when it happens. |
If it's below -55c, -65f, stay home.
Really.
Three synthetics stand
out from the rest:
Mobil Delvac 1, Mobil-1 SUV and
Shell Rotella
T Synthetic. These are C certified industrial oils meant to be
purchased in 55 gallon drums and used by companies which run a lot of
diesel engines. The Commercial oils, as discussed above, have more
expensive additive packages which are meant to prolong engine life and
oil life, as opposed to being cheap to buy at Pep Boys and helping the
car companies meet their CAFE requirements. These oils meet all the
automobile requirements through SJ, and also have extra additives to
help pick up gunk in the engine, to keep the oil from becoming acidic,
and to maintain the oil's viscosity over a long time. In fact, the
manufacturers talk about their oil's viscosity resistance to shear
forces - exactly what a motorcycle needs. Shell Rotella-T Synthetic is
available at Wal-Mart for $13 / gallon, so I consider this the motor oil
of choice. Delvac-1 is very hard to get in the west - there are only two
places in all of California where you can buy it. Mobil-1 SUV is readily
available everywhere for about $4.50 / quart. When used with the correct
filters, these oils are certified for 50,000 mile oil change intervals,
and are frequently used for 100,000 to 150,000 miles in diesel long-haul
trucks. Now, before you get all excited about the possibilities, you
must also keep in mind that the diesel engines don't run their oil
through their transmission, and the large diesels all have two oil
filters, one a normal paper filter, and the other a 1 or 2 micron filter
that catches pretty much everything. We don't have these secondary
ultra-fine oil filters on our bikes. Also, the large diesel engines hold
eleven gallons of oil - a oil and filter change costs these guys $350 if
they use synthetics, $150 if they don't.
The synthetic diesel oils
are 5w-40 oils. Some people have expressed concern to me that this
doesn't match the 10w-40 specification for their engine. The 5w rating
only applies when the oil is cold, below about 80° f. Once your oil and
engine are up to operating temperature, these are 40 weight oils, just
like all the others. In cold conditions, under 40° f, the 5w oils are
much better for your engine than a 10w oil.
AMSOil, Motul 5100,
Mobil-1 MX4T, Mobil-1, Redline, and Golden Spectro are apparently made
with high quality additive packages, similar to the commercial
synthetics. Personally, I would find it reassuring if these oils were
CI-4 certified. However, many motorcyclists have used these oils for
years with good results. They are all fine oils, and perfectly
acceptable to run in your motorcycle. They are a bit on the pricey side.
Delvac-1, AMSOil, Redline and Motul synthetics contain no petroleum oils
- they're pure synthetic. To the best of my knowledge, all other
synthetic oils contain some amount of Group III oil.
Mobil-1 automotive oils
all contain small amounts of moly - about 100 to 200 ppm. This can cause
clutch slippage in some motorcycles. I've only heard of this being a
problem in Honda Shadows.
I'm sometimes asked if
it's ok to blend your own oils. Yes, it is. Oils are all made out of
pretty much the same chemicals, and nothing really bad will happen. If I
wanted to blend my own oil, I expect I would use something like 25%
Motul 5100 10W-40 and 75% Chevron Delo 15w-40, which would get me both
the advantages of a lot of diester stock (5100 is pure diester) and the
diesel additive package. In the winter, however, I would use 25% Motul
and 75% Rotella synthetic, to get the superior low temperature
performance. In fact, I just run Rotella synthetic in everything I own,
year round: ST1300, DL650, Superhawk, Chevy Silverado, motorhome.
I'm also sometimes asked
if it's ok to run non-Harley oils in Harley-Davidsons. In my opinion,
yes. If you change your engine oil every 3,000 miles or so, you can run
pretty much any decent oil. I ran Valvoline in my Harleys for 120,000
miles. For extended oil life or superior protection, I recommend AMSOil,
Golden Spectro, Motul 5100 or Mobil-1. Harley recommends a 20w-50 oil,
so Rotella or other synthetic diesel oils will not do. However, the
15w-40 diesel oils meet the same film strength standard as 20w-50 oil,
and are just fine to run in your Harley. I'm told that the standard
Harley oils are made by Sunoco, and the Syn-3 is made by Castrol. The
Syn-3 Harley synthetic is primarily a Group III oil, and contains very
little PAO or Diester stock. I don't consider the Syn-3 Harley oil
either a particularly excellent oil, nor a competitively priced oil.
If you live in another
country, you'll have to do a bit of research to decide on an oil.
Generally, any oil certified for use in a late model Volkswagon or
Mercedes turbo diesel is a good choice. Another good idea is to go to a
truck stop and ask the truckers about brands. Rotella is marketed all
over the world, but in other countries it's called Rotella or Rimola or
Helix Ultra, and the formulation may be a bit different, depending on
local climate and preferences. It will likely also be a lot more
expensive than it is here. Sorry. I don't make your tax policy. Nor
ours. They would all be very different if I did.
If you prefer a less
expensive petroleum oil,
Chevron Delo 400,
Mobil Delvac 1300, and
Shell Rotella T
are available at any auto parts store for under $7 per gallon, or at
Sam's Club or Costco for under $6 per gallon. This price is reasonably
competitive with passenger car oils, and you are getting a Group II oil
with the superior commercial additive packages. Notice in the table
above that these oils have particularly good high shear film strength,
meaning the protection you get for your bearings is much better than
with a 10w-30 or 10w-40 oil. I don't have any information about how long
you can run these oils before their viscosity breaks down, but I'm
confident it's at least as long as the best consumer petroleum oil. If
you're really into saving money, you can often find these oils locally
in 10 gallon drums for about $50. This should keep your bike, your car,
and your wife's car in good shape for at least a year. Farmers, ranchers
and truckers buy these oils in large quantities, and we get to ride
piggy- back on their economies of scale.
A comparison of a few oils. These
numbers refer to the blended oils after VIIs are added.
|
|
Rotella |
Rotella |
Syntec |
GTX |
Syntec |
Mobil-1 |
Valvoline |
Valvoline |
|
|
Synthetic |
|
Synthetic |
|
Blend |
Synthetic |
Synthetic |
|
|
Rating |
5w-40 |
15w-40 |
10w-40 |
10w-40 |
10w-40 |
15w-50 |
10w-40 |
10w-40 |
|
pump Vs |
39k |
? |
60k |
60k! |
60k! |
? |
? |
30k* |
|
Vs @ -30 |
6400 |
? |
7000 |
7000 |
7000 |
? |
3150* |
6500 |
|
Vs @ 40 |
89 |
108 |
89 |
100 |
111 |
125 |
125 |
97 |
|
Vs @ 100 |
15 |
15.5 |
13 |
14 |
16 |
18 |
14 |
14 |
|
VI |
176 |
141 |
148 |
150 |
152 |
153 |
155 |
148 |
|
Flash |
246 |
213 |
232 |
213 |
213 |
230 |
230 |
216 |
|
Pour |
-40 |
-24 |
-33 |
-30 |
-30 |
-45 |
-40 |
-33 |
|
Ash |
1.3% |
1.5% |
? |
? |
? |
1.3% |
? |
.8% |
|
Neutral |
10 |
11.5 |
? |
? |
? |
? |
? |
? |
* = @-20c
! = @-25c
If you want to do some research on oils
yourself, here are some links. I read all this stuff and I'm still
alive, but a bit weird.
All about the new CJ-4 oils.
Oil viscosity defined.
API Service classifications.
Everything you ever wanted to know about oil, but were afraid to
ask. Here's what an
additive package manufacturer has to say about oils.
Chevron talks about base oils
and GF-4 oils.
Consumer Reports tests oils for 4,500,000 miles in NYC taxis.
Lubricants primer by Red Line.
All about oil by Ed Hackett, a college professor.
Oil
Advice from Mike Guillory, a petroleum engineer.
More Oil Advice.
Jeff
Di Carlo also has an opinion. Check out the articles in MCN Jan-Feb
'03.
MCN '94 includes viscosity breakdown testing.
Another article that includes viscosity breakdown testing. The
history of synthetic oils, only *slightly* self-serving.
Oil additives
= snake oil? (yes)
More on oil additives = snake oil
Mobil wants
your money, as does
Shell,
Valvoline,
AMSOil
and
Spectro Oil. You may be skeptical about the oil companies interests,
but they are the people making what we buy so it's interesting to hear
who they think we are and what they think we need.
Are
Harley oils the best?
FAQs about commercial
oils answered by Shell. Are
diesel oils really ok for motorcycles?
This page originally mirrored from here:
http://www.calsci.com/motorcycleinfo/Oils1.html
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