Copperhead
Veteran Member
I gathered from reading some posts that some confused used oil analysis (UOA) with used oil monitor or oil life monitor. Definately different things. I use UOA regularly on my commercial truck engines. Has very little to do with extending oil drains to fantastic levels, though I do exceed the OEM recommended drains by 30%. It has more to do with monitoring what is going on inside the engine. Lead, Iron, copper, tin, chromium, silicon, sodium, potassium, etc levels all have a meaning in that oil sample. And based on patterns that develop over multiple oil samples, you can determine when something doesn't seem right and needs checked. A lot of semi truck owners swear by a 10,000 mile oil change interval, even though no OEM has a standard recomendation of less than 15,000 miles, and I have never changed oil less than 20,000 miles in my commercial diesels since the early 1990's. And every one of my diesels has gotten over 1 million miles before ever being opened up for a major repair. UOA's are solid evidence in any warranty dispute. Be it within or outside the OEM recommendations.
With modern CJ-4 HDEO, the gap between performance of regular vs synthetic oils got closer. Chevron has done a lot of testing recently showing their dino 400LE 15w40 is good for up to 70,000 mile oil changes on class 8 truck engines. Unless you have a real need for a synthetic, most folks really are just spending more than they need to for solid protection of their engine. I will concede that some engines "prefer" a particular brand over another. It is the same little mystery as to why a particular .22 rifle does better with a particular brand of .22 ammo while a friends .22 rifle does better on another brand. Both brands are good, but for some reason, the rifles do not like the same brand. Engines seem to have similar quirks nowadays. One engine does great on Rotella while another gets mediocre results with it. That second engine seems to prefer Chevron Delo or Mobil Delvac. Just the slight changes in oil additive compositions can affect how an engine relates to that brand of oil. Just one of life's little mysteries.
With modern CJ-4 HDEO, the gap between performance of regular vs synthetic oils got closer. Chevron has done a lot of testing recently showing their dino 400LE 15w40 is good for up to 70,000 mile oil changes on class 8 truck engines. Unless you have a real need for a synthetic, most folks really are just spending more than they need to for solid protection of their engine. I will concede that some engines "prefer" a particular brand over another. It is the same little mystery as to why a particular .22 rifle does better with a particular brand of .22 ammo while a friends .22 rifle does better on another brand. Both brands are good, but for some reason, the rifles do not like the same brand. Engines seem to have similar quirks nowadays. One engine does great on Rotella while another gets mediocre results with it. That second engine seems to prefer Chevron Delo or Mobil Delvac. Just the slight changes in oil additive compositions can affect how an engine relates to that brand of oil. Just one of life's little mysteries.