Converted by Synthetic oil
Seeing is believing.
In 1986 after two terribly cold winters, which played havoc on my poor JD 318 sitting in -35 degree for days on end, I was not looking forward to another winter freezing my tail off trying to start the green block of ice.
I can't remember who's commercial it was, but his car was in a block of ice and it started and guess what it was a syn oil commercial.
Well there is no block heater for an air-cooled engine and I was warned against using a dipstick oil heater because of there being only 1.5 quarts.
So what the hay, I tried it in desperation.
Well when its -35 that green block of ice has to turn over for about 10-15 seconds before it even tries to fire for the first time and then you have to keep it cranking until the engine is turning over faster than the starter or it dies.
The first this I noticed with the syn oil was after only 2 seconds the darn oil light goes out. Usually with regular oil the oil light doesn't go out until the motor is up to mid speed for several seconds. This means 10-15 seconds of pre firing cranking, 3-5 seconds cranking with plugs starting to fire and then 2-3 seconds 1/2 throttle and then the oil light goes out. Looks to me like 20-25 seconds with parts moving and no lubrication. Can you see the metal filings and hear the grinding.
Well with syn oil this nasty part is 2 seconds.
Every expert out there knows, and lord knows there are billions of them, this first few moments is when all the engine wear takes place.
The oil choice is a no brainer as far as I am concerned. Anything else syn oil can do is a bonus.
Yes oil is oil but give me oil pressure now before my engine starts not 20 seconds after.
Ever since then everything that rotates in our domain receives syn oil and so will the Bota at the 50 hr mark.
There is some debate about using syn oil in pre broke-in engines.
I do know that many higher end performance cars, Corvette, Caddy, Viper, etc. come from the factory with syn oil.
The only problem I have experienced with syn oil was with the JD318 this summer. When I changed the oil I only had 5W30 and the JD 18 HP Onan started puffing a little blue smoke upon startup or throttle back. Well I changed it again within the hour and used 20W50 and the blues went away. Obviously nothing to do with syn oil just the wrong weight of oil.
Oil is cheep, even syn oil when compared to rebuild costs and down time.
Remember the Fram commercial you can pay me now or you can pay me later.
Speaking of Fram, something that really interests me is a better oil filter, so I just started some research.
More oil please. More clean oil that is.
2001
BX2200
All Kubota FEL,
Tiller, box blade,
blower w/elec shute,
60 mid mt deck.
Ag tires on order.
I traded up from
a 1984 JD 318
after 687 hrs.