</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Apparently facts, statistics, pictures, and inside industry articles are not to be believed by you. )</font>
If I read on the internet that someone says all horses are pink, yet in my entire experience I have never seen one, should I conclude that, in spite of all my experience, all horses must be pink? It's a matter of balancing one's personal experience with that of others, and in the case of oil, there are a lot of tall tales floating around the internet that, until I see it, I shall choose to regard with some suspicion. The second hand evidence you offer is in direct contradiction with all that I have seen in the last 25 years and I have plenty of first-hand evidence which suggests that there are NO dire consequences for not using synthetic.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( It is interesting that today I spoke with a guy who owned a muffler shop who is totally convinced that the U.S. government rammed the planes into the twin towers just to give them a reason to go to war. He really believes that in spite of all of the facts, pictures, interviews, and publications. Some people are simply not subject to logic nor reasoning. /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif Have a good 'un! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif )</font>
This I don't appreciate at all. Simply because I don't buy into your synthetic oil pitch is no reason to suggest anything like this.
This should be an easy thing to verify. If sludge build-up is as common as you say, then some members of this board should have experienced it. Somehow I doubt that I'be been living a charmed existence and have dodged the sludge bullet, expecially since I change the dino oil every six months or 7500 miles on cars and trucks, once a year on the air cooled engines and motorcycles, and every 15K on diesel trucks. I used to be on the 3k oil change cycle and found it to be a waste of time and oil. I've been inside an L10 Cummins and 3406 Cat, an Onan, a Tecumseh, a Harley, a VW diesel, a VW air-cooled Type 1, a V4 Honda motorcycle, a Continental 65, a Lycoming O320, a 350 Chevy V8, a 4 cyl Toyota, a 3.0 Ford V6, a 2.0 4 cyl Ford, and have yet to see any sign of sludge in any of them. The last engine I saw sludge in was a 292 ci Ford V8, circa 1974.
That is my experience. If others on this forum want to put up lists of the engines they've personally had apart and did find sludge, so much the better.