Re: [FWDLK] [Fwd: Re: [FWDLK] L-FORWARDLOOK Digest - 19 Dec 2005 to 20 D
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Re: [FWDLK] [Fwd: Re: [FWDLK] L-FORWARDLOOK Digest - 19 Dec 2005 to 20 Dec 2005 (#2005-343)]



Pennzoil (and all Pennsylvania crude oils) has a huge amount of paraffin wax

>in it

 

Several years ago noted automotive journalist Matt Joseph stated this same fact on his weekly Wisconsin Public Radio program about Pennzoil containing a huge amount of paraffin wax but at the same time said that Pennsylvania crude was no longer used in the oil.  He said Quaker State also no longer used PA oil.  I recently read also (somewhere on the web) that this was true and there was little crude oil left in Western PA and that Shell Oil Co. of Texas currently owns Pennzoil and it consisted of imported crude.   I have a good friend who has used Pennzoil since time began and he swears by it.  He tells me he has put over 200,000 miles on engines with no sludge problems or oil related problems.  I am a staunch Valvoline user so we get into it once in awhile.  Speaking of cutting oil filters apart; Matt Joseph said one time that if you cut a Fram filter in half you would find a piece of string they used during production still wrapped around inside of filter. I cut one in half and sure enough, there was the piece of string. That was several years ago.  A couple years ago I cut one in half again and now there was no string.  But I did happen to cut a Motorcraft one in half and lo and behold, there was a piece of string around the inside paper filter.  I don’t know if that string would cause problems by breaking or coming loose, but it seems kind of shoddy.  So before throwing that used filter away cut ‘er in half and see what you got.  Also Matt suggested counting the paper folds on the filter.  I guess the more folds, the better filtration. I’ve used 10W-30 Valvoline in my ’59 Plymouth (102,000 miles on engine) for about 7 years now and have no problems. I drive the car regularly during summer and change oil in spring and fall and it doesn’t use a drop in between. I’ve taken both valve covers off several times over the years when detailing engine and they are clean.         

Fins59 - John Z

Mosinee, Wisconsin

1959 Plymouth Sport Fury

1959 Plymouth Fury

"If It's New PLYMOUTH's Got It"


From: Forward Look Mopar Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Charles Pollock
Sent: Friday, December 23, 2005 11:08 PM
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [FWDLK] [Fwd: Re: [FWDLK] L-FORWARDLOOK Digest - 19 Dec 2005 to 20 Dec 2005 (#2005-343)]

 

Just realized I didn't send this to everyone.


-------- Original Message --------

Subject:

Re: [FWDLK] L-FORWARDLOOK Digest - 19 Dec 2005 to 20 Dec 2005 (#2005-343)

Date:

Fri, 23 Dec 2005 09:37:50 -0500

From:

Charles Pollock <cpollock@xxxxxxxx>

To:

David Homstad <dhomstad@xxxxxxxxxxx>

CC:

eastern sierra Adj Services <esierraadj@xxxxxxxxx>

References:

<GBEIKFKEEGCOHKMLHDGEEEDECLAA.dhomstad@xxxxxxxxxxx>

 

Hi Dave and Niel,
Dave hit the nail right on the head, he is exactly right.  I only 
mentioned pulling the valve cover because it is the easiest thing to 
remove to get a look inside the engine.  It is a good 'relative' 
reference.  Generally if it looks bad there, it looks bad everywhere.  
Also, you can buy a magnet that goes on the end of the oil filter.  This 
helps trap more of the small metal particulates in the oil.  I have used 
them in the past with decent results, so you may want to consider it.  
If you ever want to see something interesting, cut apart a used oil 
filter, and check out the sludge inside.  Nasty stuff- basically tar.  
Most modern oils are formulated to limit the amount of sludge 
generated.  But oil change intervals, driving style, and the general 
enviroment the car operates in all contribute to how much is generated.
You can always tell when someone has used Pennzoil in an engine- the 
smell is ungodly.
 
So- to everyone on this list,
A very Merry Christmas, Happy Hannukah, Happy Holidays in General!
 
Take Care,
Charles.
 
David Homstad wrote:
 
>The gunk is like the plaque in your arteries. It sticks and stays stuck.
>With a good solvent or detergent, it can be re-dissolved back into the oil,
>where it will continue to circulate until dumped at the next oil change.
>This is what makes the oil black. A good oil is also supposed to keep new
>gunk in suspension as it is made, until an oil change. There is a limit to
>how much gunk the oil can keep suspended. The oil filter removes chunks of
>gunk, metal wear particles, sand and grit that get past the air filter and
>then rings, etc. Very fine particles small enough to pass through the oil
>filter are generally harmless, but can accumulate between oil changes, and
>in sufficient quantities, accelerate engine wear. All the above are reasons
>why we change oil.
> 
>Gunk is broken-down oil hydrocarbons. This is caused by high heat (like
>around the rings and exhaust valves), chemical reactions with water and
>acids in the oil (from ring blow-by), and plain old mechanical shear of the
>molecules.
> 
>If oil changes are infrequent and gunk accumulates, it can slowly close off
>an oil passage (heart attack) or a chunk can break loose and suddenly close
>off a passage (stroke). A loose chunk is a possibility when a very dirty
>engine gets treated with an engine cleaner.
> 
>As you asked, the liberated gunk travels everywhere oil goes, continuously,
>but the oil rings keep it out of the combustion chamber. The detergents in
>tranny oil will actually clean gunk from the rings and keep them loose. My
>personal preference is to add a cleaner (like tranny fluid) maybe 100 miles
>before an oil change so the loosened gunk spends less time moving around.
>Some engine cleaners, like Rislone, are powerful solvents and thin the oil
>too much for normal driving, so they go in for 10 minutes or so, and only at
>an idle rpm, just before an oil change.
> 
>Gunk likes to settle out of the oil, to the bottom of the oil pan (where
>most of the oil is) when it sits for a while. This is why most of the gunk
>is in the pan. In the old days before detergent oil and filters, mechanics
>would let used oil set for a few weeks until the gunk settled to the bottom
>of the container, then put it back into an engine.
> 
>Oil from the upper end, and everywhere else, does not go through the filter
>on the way to the sump. The sump collects all the used oil and gunk, and
>stores it for the oil pump. The oil pump sucks the oil from the sump and
>pushes it through the filter first, then on to everywhere else in the
>engine.
> 
>Pennzoil (and all Pennsylvania crude oils) has a huge amount of paraffin wax
>in it. This breaks down much easier than oil and forms a LOT of sludge. So,
>Pennzoil has a huge amount of detergents to keep all this sludge in
>suspension until an oil change. But if not changed frequently (less than
>2000 miles), the sludge will overwhelm the detergents and sludge will
>deposit everywhere. But if changed frequently (less than 500 miles), it will
>remove old sludge and clean the engine. Unfortunately, Pennzoil's paraffin
>is not the best lubricant and allows high friction areas like cam lobes to
>wear fast. And when cold (like here), it has the viscosity of caramel.
> 
>How many miles does Horace have since his overhaul??
> 
>How often do you change his oil??
> 
>What brand and weight oil does Horace get??
> 
>Dave
> 
>-----Original Message-----
>From: eastern sierra Adj Services [mailto:esierraadj@xxxxxxxxx]
>Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2005 10:20 PM
>To: cpollock@xxxxxxxx; Dhomstad@xxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: Re: [FWDLK] L-FORWARDLOOK Digest - 19 Dec 2005 to 20 Dec 2005
>(#2005-343)
> 
>Charles (& Dave) ; I like the idea of adding a qt of trannie juice to
>the engine, on general purpose, but: here's the question: why doesn't
>the liberated gunk get into the cylinder walls/combustion chambers?
> 
>If the gunk (slight, in H's -case, as his engine was O/H'ed 15 byears
>ago) is in the upper-end, would it be forced thru the oil filter, before
>the oil is routed to the sump?---THAT would be a pretty good scenario.
> 
>I don't think that a gunked pan-floor would be thrown-up, into the
>engine, but, according to Charles, a LOT of gunk is delivered to the
>pan; why doesn't the gunk, then get (re-)distributed throughout the
>engine???
> 
>Neil
> 
> 
> 
 
 

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