Royal Purple 15w40
For three times the price as Rotella T 15w40 is it REALLY that much better? My engine quited down and runs loads smoother than it did with the stock oil in it, and I'm running the Rotella...seems to me that it is doing just a fine and dandy job...why pay three times the price, I say?
Derek
Derek
My statement wasn't mean to criticize, so I hope that you don't feel that way...I have never seen a breakdown of the two oils side by side, such as viscosity tests, overall lubrication performance and how well each breaks down under high heat...my only question was is RP 3x as good as Rotella T? If so, I may make the switch...
Derek
Derek
I seriously doubt that syn is 3 times better than petro if you change frequently. The two biggest reasons I use it is for extended service and the heat stability. From what I've read, I could probably get 15k out of petro oil with the bypass but I'm thinking it would be safer to run that long with syn. I'll probably stay with the 7000 cuz low ambient isn't a problem where I'm at. Craig
Please don't take this as if I'm slamming your choice of oil because I'm not, I was just informing you of past UOA's on RP and its' performance.
Here's a link to Bob is the Oil Guy....just scroll down to the Gas Engine UOA & Diesel Engine UOA sections. Best of luck
In my experience of using both oils, the 9000 obviously has better cold flow properties, and my oil consumption is lower with it as well.
Considering 7000 is like 70-80% conv/20-30% PAO, and 9000 is all "synthetic", and there is only a couple/few bucks a gallon difference when buying it in cases, I just go with the 9000 and keep it simple. It is a great oil.
Royal Purple, it is widely believed, uses GIII in their synthetic oils. I think it is a good oil, but not for what they want for it. I bought a 93 Ford 7.3 IDI on it a few years ago as a farm truck that had 280K on it with Royal Purple 15w-40and Amsoil bypass. Still runs like a top and uses no oil at all. I use Schaeffer's in it now tho.
The following is from Martin Williamson's (Mr. Williamson is a Noria representative) comments on an automotive forum's FAQs - Noria is an international lubrication consultancy firm:
Rusty
I do occasional track days, too, what should I use?
There are a couple of other smaller specialist oil manufacturers such as Molykote or Royal Purple who, in fact, use purer base stocks that are less susceptible to shearing and provide a greater film strength.... These are proven case studies, the motorsport people use Royal Purple and independent assessment has shown better wear protection than even oils like Mobil 1.
There are a couple of other smaller specialist oil manufacturers such as Molykote or Royal Purple who, in fact, use purer base stocks that are less susceptible to shearing and provide a greater film strength.... These are proven case studies, the motorsport people use Royal Purple and independent assessment has shown better wear protection than even oils like Mobil 1.
The following is from Martin Williamson's (Mr. Williamson is a Noria representative) comments on an automotive forum's FAQs - Noria is an international lubrication consultancy firm:
Quote:
I do occasional track days, too, what should I use?
There are a couple of other smaller specialist oil manufacturers such as Molykote or Royal Purple who, in fact, use purer base stocks that are less susceptible to shearing and provide a greater film strength.... These are proven case studies, the motorsport people use Royal Purple and independent assessment has shown better wear protection than even oils like Mobil 1.
Rusty
Quote:
I do occasional track days, too, what should I use?
There are a couple of other smaller specialist oil manufacturers such as Molykote or Royal Purple who, in fact, use purer base stocks that are less susceptible to shearing and provide a greater film strength.... These are proven case studies, the motorsport people use Royal Purple and independent assessment has shown better wear protection than even oils like Mobil 1.
Rusty
What proves that RP has a purer base stock and are less susceptible to shearing than other oils with equal base stocks?
Mr. Williamson oughta take a look at the Used Oil Analysis section of Bob is the Oil Guy and look at real world analysis of the Royal Purple oils. I see an oil with an inflated price tag, that has poor TBN retention, and shears badly in engines that have past track records of being easy on oil. UOA's don't lie.
No, Noria is an independent lubrication consulting firm.
My point is that you can find support on the Internet for any position one might wish to take. I run Mobil 1 in my wife's Durango, Royal Purple in my Acura 3.2TL-S and Delo 400 in my Ram. All have given excellent service.
Rusty
My point is that you can find support on the Internet for any position one might wish to take. I run Mobil 1 in my wife's Durango, Royal Purple in my Acura 3.2TL-S and Delo 400 in my Ram. All have given excellent service.
Rusty
I'd like to know more about shearing. Is shearing the reason an engine will use more oil after many 1000 miles of extended service than it did from the start? How do you tell from the UOA if that is happening? I started ext. service with my 97. During beak-in, I used petro oil and changed every ~3000 miles and it would only use about a cup of oil in that time. I was leary of syn engine oils at that time and there was a guy on the TDR who bragged up Lubrication Engineers oil saying it was as good as any syn, in ext. service so I tried it for a couple of ext. intervals. After about 7k miles the oil consumption would start going up and by about 15k it was using 1 qt. to about 2k miles. Then I'd change it and be fine til about 7k again and the cycle repeated itself. Also TBN would go low with the LE. Then I tried RP and it would go about 10k miles before consumption would go up and it degraded much slower than the LE. My UOAs always looked very good and I went 25k on the RP, one interval. The TBN was always right up there. But nobody could ever tell me why the consumption always goes up at a certain point and continues going up, then all is good again right after a change. Is that a shearing problem? That's one reason why I'm trying the Schaeffers 7000. BTW, I gave all the 97 UOAs to the guy who bought the truck so I can't see them again but I could swear my wear metals were lower than 95% of the Schaeffer UOAs on Bobs UOA forum. I'd go back to RP in a flash! Craig
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