newbury
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2009
- Messages
- 14,186
- Location
- From Vt, in Va, retiring to MS
- Tractor
- Kubota's - B7610, M4700
The benefits to synthetic other than cold weather properties is extended oil changes. Only way to be certain weather oil is needing changed or not is an analysis. If you can go twice as long on synthetic, for twice the money.......its a good deal. Because its half the waste and half the labor for the same cost.
<snip> With regular maintenance its hard to go wrong.
As usual LD1 puts in some key points - "extended oil changes" and "regular maintenance". Older equipment recommended oil changes based on the oils and filters of their time with a healthy margin for CYA so they didn't have warranty issues. Newer equipment also has tighter tolerances. So I need a UOA (Used Oil Analysis) to establish a pattern.
If you only "use a lot of gallons of oil a year" you really need to sort out your equipment and determine where your oil dollar is going with appropriate testing.From a thread I did about switching back to dino oil from synthetic http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/oil-fuel-lubricants/372323-switch-back-dino-oil-synthetic.html I'm thinking that's probably what I will do. After all, I only use equipment in warm weather, sometimes around 55 or 60 degrees but mostly into the 80 and above range. So the cold start of synthetic is no big deal and I use a lot of gallons of oil a year. Seems to me that dino oil today is light years ahead of anything from years ago.
<snip>
For example I've a number of small 4 cylinder engines (lawnmowers, generators) that only use a quart or two and are real easy to change, don't have oil filters. A $20 test on any of these would cover many years of oil changes. Then there is my F350 which takes about 4 gallons and a filter and was recommended to have the oil changed every 3,000 miles under heavy use. Which would be 5 changes per year at about $100/change if I DIM.
By testing I found with my usage I can expect to go about 20,000 between changes using T6 in my F350 with excellent UOA's, so I went from 5 changes per year to 1.
So if skipping an oil change would save you the cost of several UOA's a UOA is worth it. But if it's not then why worry.