songhunter
Bronze Member
Yes, the good old oil debate /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif The only ones I'd rather read about are the Husky-Stihl and the HST-gear debates. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
The study conducted by Consumer Reports a few years back was referenced in a previous thread a few days ago. That is probably the most definitive study on motor oils I have read in a while, but I'm just a consumer. The conclusion was that synthetics are not a great advantage to the average vehicle operator. In fact, the study showed very little difference in engine wear between premium grade motor oils.
The fact is that premium grade motor oils these days are better than they have to be. It may make some people feel warm and fuzzy to put synthetic in their equipment, but that's about the extent of it's usefulness for most folks.
Consider a fleet of police vehicles (around 250), periodically maintained with premium grade motor oil (usually Kendall or Castrol, but basically low-bid). The cars are turned off when they're maintained or filled with fuel. One shift drives for eight hours, fills the tank, then the next shift drives, and... you get the idea. Most will go well over 200,000 miles (and that's in stop and go traffic, long idling while at the doughnut shop /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif , er, investigating accidents, etc) with very few motor oil related failures. Most everything else breaks before engines when the correct service interval is maintained.
Some might say this fleet would use synthetic oils, but run the numbers. Are synthetics a good investment? I don't see how they could be.
Anyhow, that's my opinion and I'm sticking to it! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
The study conducted by Consumer Reports a few years back was referenced in a previous thread a few days ago. That is probably the most definitive study on motor oils I have read in a while, but I'm just a consumer. The conclusion was that synthetics are not a great advantage to the average vehicle operator. In fact, the study showed very little difference in engine wear between premium grade motor oils.
The fact is that premium grade motor oils these days are better than they have to be. It may make some people feel warm and fuzzy to put synthetic in their equipment, but that's about the extent of it's usefulness for most folks.
Consider a fleet of police vehicles (around 250), periodically maintained with premium grade motor oil (usually Kendall or Castrol, but basically low-bid). The cars are turned off when they're maintained or filled with fuel. One shift drives for eight hours, fills the tank, then the next shift drives, and... you get the idea. Most will go well over 200,000 miles (and that's in stop and go traffic, long idling while at the doughnut shop /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif , er, investigating accidents, etc) with very few motor oil related failures. Most everything else breaks before engines when the correct service interval is maintained.
Some might say this fleet would use synthetic oils, but run the numbers. Are synthetics a good investment? I don't see how they could be.
Anyhow, that's my opinion and I'm sticking to it! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif