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posted: September 3, 2004 written by: Eric Allred, Guest Writer article
edited: September 4, 2004 |
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| Synthetic Oil Explained | ||||
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Let's talk first about what "dino" oil is (Dino is short for Dinosaur, which is when it started forming). Dino oil is created from something called "Base Stock". Base stock what the oil companies get after they have processed the crude oil that comes from the ground. From there, additives are combined with the Base Stock, to create our motor oil. There are 7 main additives which include anti-foaming agents, anti-corrosion, etc, etc. At the molecular level, dino oil contains molecules of varying sizes. Imagine the floor of a gymnasium covered with basketballs, baseballs, volleyballs, and beach balls. Now imagine that all those different size "balls" are moving around, flowing past the floor. Every time a ball surface contacts the floor surface, the ball absorbs heat from the floor. That is how oil removes heat from your engine components, from surface to surface contact. Now imagine the same gymnasium floor covered in uniformly sized golf balls. Smaller, more uniform molecules can absorb more heat from a surface, because there are more of them AND they have a larger surface to volume ratio which means they have more surface area contact. That's what synthetic oil is. A man-made "Base Stock", where all the molecules are the same size, and smaller than those in dino oil. Better heat transfer, better lubricating properties, and a lot wider temperature range without breakdown, are now obtained. Myth #1 debunked Oil does not break down under normal use. This is true of both dino and synth oil and is also the reason why you take oil to the Recycling Center and not the trash dump. So if oil itself doesn't ever degrade, why do we have to change it? The answer is twofold: additives and contamination. It will probably surprise you to learn that synthetic oil has all the same additives that dino oil has! The additives in oil DO break down, which is part of what necessitates oil changes. The other reason for regular oil changes is that with use, motor oil becomes contaminated (dirt, water, acids, etc). Using synthetic oil does not protect against either of these problems, which is why you CANNOT go further between oil changes when running a synthetic. You should still change your synthetic oil at the same intervals as you do with dino oil. Anyone want to guess how many claims Mobil 1 had to pay to people that were going 25,000 miles between changes? Myth #2 debunked Synthetic oil
causing oil leaks is another commonly spread myth. The truth of the
matter is that if all your engine seals and gaskets are in good condition,
synthetic oil will NOT leak in your engine. The myth started because
on occasion, an engine will leak with synthetic oil, but not dino
oil. The reason for this is that the smaller molecules of the synthetic
are able to get past very small crevices, where the larger molecules
of dino oil cannot. But this does not mean that the synthetic oil
has caused the leak, it simply has "discovered" an infant
leak, and regardless of what oil you are running, this infant leak
will eventually grow to a size that will allow dino oil to occupy
and pass also. Synthetic oil has not been shown to deteriorate engine
seals or gaskets. It is not some evil solvent that will break down
sealant, or anything like that. Like was said earlier, it is just
a man-made base stock, that is uniform and smaller in molecule size
than dino oil. Nothing more, nothing less. Since synthetic
oil has better heat transfer qualities than dino oil, your internal
engine temperatures will be lower. Things like bearings, especially,
will not operate at as high of a temperature as a result. The wider
range of temperatures that synthetic oil can withstand is well suited
for the air-cooled VW engine. With head temperatures normally between
300-350 degrees, synthetic will not breakdown while lubricating the
valvetrain components at the heads. The better lubricating properties
of synthetic in general will lead to a longer engine life as well.
On average, when synthetic oil is run in an air-cooled VW engine,
head temperatures stay the same, but engine oil temps reduce by anywhere
from 10 to 15 degrees. This is in engines that have all the correct
cooling tin in place, and are not suffering from overheating to begin
with. Important note: Do not run synthetic to fix a hot running engine.
Find the real reason it's running hot, and fix it! At Aircooled.Net we recommend that you run synthetic oils in all cases, with one exception: you should continue to run dino oil (and change it every 1k miles) if your car still has the stock oiling system. In transmissions we can not praise synthetics enough; RUN IT, especially if you live somewhere that gets cold (under 30F/0C). There is one thing I need to clarify though -- if you are not running an oil filter, there really is no point to using synthetic since your oil is going to become contaminated very quickly. Your engine will still benefit somewhat from it, but due to the higher cost of synthetic oil, the gain of running it before it becomes contaminated is negligible. Oil change intervals range from 1000-3000 miles in the VW engine with a strainer (not a filter). VWoM (Mexico) recommends 1k mile intervals on non-filtered engines; keep this in mind for your pride and joy! But on the flip side, the stock VW engine only takes 2.5 qts anyways, it's not going to break you if you do want to run synthetic! |
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Eric Allred, Aircooled.Net Guest Writer |
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