I often wonder why all the hype about "synthetics"? I mean they weren't around years back and engines still high mileage with Dino-Oil and no ill effects..?Why are they so much better really? (this coming from a person with no "oil" experience so don't flame me for it) I mean i understand better lubricating properties and longer oil life (?).. can anyone give a good example why Syn oil is better then Con oil?Thanks.. im intrigued by this
Quote from: 8v-of-fury on July 03, 2009, 05:11:15 pmI often wonder why all the hype about "synthetics"? I mean they weren't around years back and engines still high mileage with Dino-Oil and no ill effects..?Why are they so much better really? (this coming from a person with no "oil" experience so don't flame me for it) I mean i understand better lubricating properties and longer oil life (?).. can anyone give a good example why Syn oil is better then Con oil?Thanks.. im intrigued by this Take a 1 litre bottle of your regular dino oil and 1 of the synthetic and stick it in your freezer for a few hours. Then take out and pour. The dino likely won't even come out of the bottle, while the synthetic will. Now think of a cold winter morning start-up and your poor oil pump trying to pull oil that has been in -20 degree temps all night and pushing it through some of the oil passages in your engine.
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
Rotella does not make synthetic oil. A legal loophole allows them to sell dino oil cracked to have "synthetic-like properties" as if it were real synthetic. Thats why its not sold in European countries or Canada.
There are those few engines that will come around and cease to consume oil.. All depends on the condition and composition of the engine...However if it's already consuming dino oil, it's going to get worse with synthetic, and if the engine is already in that sort of condition, it's not going to get any better.. 90% of the time it'll remain worse...One of my former VW's consumed approximately 1 quart of dino every 2500 miles.. After switching to Amsoil it consumed a quart every 1000 miles.. It continued this for a year or 60K miles until switching back to dino.. Once back on Rotella it went back to it's normal 1 quart for every 2500 miles.. My 70 Torino is much the same way...With only being driven a few hundred miles a year it's tough to gauge consumption, but with a relatively low milage yet original engine the proof is both on the spark plugs and the floor of the garage.. Now that it too is back on Rotella there are neither drops on the floor nor deposits on the plugs... No myth about that...My 91 Crown Vic and 96 Grand Marquis are absolutely fine on synthetic.. The the 91 was switched at 150K miles, the MGM at 54K miles.. When I have the new engine done for the VW it too will be on synthetic...Nothing to be scared of indeed. Some vehicles respond well, others don't.. But as far as cost effectivness if one is already dumping a fair amount of dino oil through an engine it woudl be foolish to be dumping more something that costs more through it...
I don't think there is such a thing as a 1.6 VW Diesel old, new, bored or not that doesn't burn at least a quart every 3,000 mi. at least is there?
I've found all my Vw engines to be the same. The top half of the dipstick just disappears but the bottom half never seems to go away.