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Is oil vicosity related to oil pressures?
With that analgy you could say any diesel engine oil "that is designed for agricultural and american diesel application" was a high detergent oil.Yom wrote:being that its designed primarily for agricultural and american diesel applications i'd say it would be
My point behind the question was I didnt want hear-say or a guess.
Dazza
well, i compared my oil pressures a while ago when switching oils from HPR diesel, to rimula X, and recorded them, in this table.
TD42, 200odd thousand km, with penrite HPR diesel 20w60 in the first column, and shell rimula X 15w40 in the second, both after about 30 minutes driving, fresh oil and filters each time, only about a week between the two readings.
RPM........ penrite.....shell
750.........18........15
1000.......30.........18
1200.......34.........22
1500.......40.........30
2000.......44.........38
2500.......47.........43
3000.......50 ........45
what do people think of these results?
as the shell stuff has aged its lucky to see 40 PSI when hot at 2500-2800 rpm, rarely rev far past this for long to take a good look at oil pressure.
whats peoples thoughts?
cheers
TD42, 200odd thousand km, with penrite HPR diesel 20w60 in the first column, and shell rimula X 15w40 in the second, both after about 30 minutes driving, fresh oil and filters each time, only about a week between the two readings.
RPM........ penrite.....shell
750.........18........15
1000.......30.........18
1200.......34.........22
1500.......40.........30
2000.......44.........38
2500.......47.........43
3000.......50 ........45
what do people think of these results?
as the shell stuff has aged its lucky to see 40 PSI when hot at 2500-2800 rpm, rarely rev far past this for long to take a good look at oil pressure.
whats peoples thoughts?
cheers
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
what i think is, it proves the thicker oil makes more pressure.love ke70 wrote:well, i compared my oil pressures a while ago when switching oils from HPR diesel, to rimula X, and recorded them, in this table.
TD42, 200odd thousand km, with penrite HPR diesel 20w60 in the first column, and shell rimula X 15w40 in the second, both after about 30 minutes driving, fresh oil and filters each time, only about a week between the two readings.
RPM........ penrite.....shell
750.........18........15
1000.......30.........18
1200.......34.........22
1500.......40.........30
2000.......44.........38
2500.......47.........43
3000.......50 ........45
what do people think of these results?
as the shell stuff has aged its lucky to see 40 PSI when hot at 2500-2800 rpm, rarely rev far past this for long to take a good look at oil pressure.
whats peoples thoughts?
cheers
doesn't show anything for the condition of the engine or oil pump or for the quality of each oil. Doesn't show anything for wear rates or for the ability of the oil to remove impurities and prevent buildup.
http://www.mothfukle-engineering.com/
well obviously a list of oil pressures is only going to show that the thicker oil creates more pressure. and not its ability to perform its myriad of tasks
my question was, do the pressures on the rimula x seem high enough to give protection at high load, low rpm points?
and are those the sort of pressures people would expect, or do my results seem a bit low?
cheers, andy
my question was, do the pressures on the rimula x seem high enough to give protection at high load, low rpm points?
and are those the sort of pressures people would expect, or do my results seem a bit low?
cheers, andy
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
Oils aint oils, the battle is not oil pressure within reason it resistance to shear. What happens when a person has a 1l of the highest quality oil for a td4.2 say dello 400 15w 40 then adds, viscosity improver to push it to a 60wt? it scraps that good oil, it is now 1l + the viscosity improver + other additives to pull it all together.
If a person is going to run an oil look for an oil with the smallest difference between the first and second number - less viscosity improver added = better shear stability.
lot's more to picking a true quality oil although still along the line of overweight oils, they increase the temperature between journal surfaces where it is squeezed, the temperature here sky-rockets! - not good!
No way no how would i like to put any Penrite engine oil in my truck, but I would be physically sick pouring overweight HPR in.
Go the dello or rimula and save the engine the abuse of running the so many average and below average oils out there.
If a person is going to run an oil look for an oil with the smallest difference between the first and second number - less viscosity improver added = better shear stability.
lot's more to picking a true quality oil although still along the line of overweight oils, they increase the temperature between journal surfaces where it is squeezed, the temperature here sky-rockets! - not good!
No way no how would i like to put any Penrite engine oil in my truck, but I would be physically sick pouring overweight HPR in.
Go the dello or rimula and save the engine the abuse of running the so many average and below average oils out there.
*JUST LUV IT* 96 GQ LWB TD4.2, Cav, Kings, Dobinsons, Motorguard, Enginesaver, 400 pro, Cooper ST's (rolls eyes), fleetguard oil filters, Delo 400 engine oil, Delo ESI gearbox oil and an RTC.
Finally. some one who agrees with me about Penrite.fnqcairns wrote:Oils aint oils, the battle is not oil pressure within reason it resistance to shear. What happens when a person has a 1l of the highest quality oil for a td4.2 say dello 400 15w 40 then adds, viscosity improver to push it to a 60wt? it scraps that good oil, it is now 1l + the viscosity improver + other additives to pull it all together.
If a person is going to run an oil look for an oil with the smallest difference between the first and second number - less viscosity improver added = better shear stability.
lot's more to picking a true quality oil although still along the line of overweight oils, they increase the temperature between journal surfaces where it is squeezed, the temperature here sky-rockets! - not good!
No way no how would i like to put any Penrite engine oil in my truck, but I would be physically sick pouring overweight HPR in.
Go the dello or rimula and save the engine the abuse of running the so many average and below average oils out there.
http://www.mothfukle-engineering.com/
Just touching base.
It's been around 7,000kms since my initial post.
Used Penrite and as I initially stated, the pressure was all good, the engine sounded good and the power was as good as it was going to get.
Sad to say that after only 7,000 I have lost alot of power. The engine struggles to startup cold and the oil is no longer doing anything to quiet the engine down. Very dissapointed at the longevity of the oil. The pressure is almost non existant once the engine warms up.
I will have to move the next change forward a bit. I won't be using Penrite though. The sales pitch was that it was the best oil available. The proof is that I have never had a worse result from any other oil I have ever used.
So to those people who warned me about Penrite. Thankyou, you were right.
Dave
It's been around 7,000kms since my initial post.
Used Penrite and as I initially stated, the pressure was all good, the engine sounded good and the power was as good as it was going to get.
Sad to say that after only 7,000 I have lost alot of power. The engine struggles to startup cold and the oil is no longer doing anything to quiet the engine down. Very dissapointed at the longevity of the oil. The pressure is almost non existant once the engine warms up.
I will have to move the next change forward a bit. I won't be using Penrite though. The sales pitch was that it was the best oil available. The proof is that I have never had a worse result from any other oil I have ever used.
So to those people who warned me about Penrite. Thankyou, you were right.
Dave
1997 GQ 4.2 Diesel Wagon
Aftermarket turbo & intercooler, 3" Exhaust,
4" susp Lift, 3" body lift, 35" Muddies
Spotties that start bushfires at 100m
Pleasure in life : Towing Toyotas
Aftermarket turbo & intercooler, 3" Exhaust,
4" susp Lift, 3" body lift, 35" Muddies
Spotties that start bushfires at 100m
Pleasure in life : Towing Toyotas
MuddyTroll wrote:Just touching base.
It's been around 7,000kms since my initial post.
Used Penrite and as I initially stated, the pressure was all good, the engine sounded good and the power was as good as it was going to get.
Sad to say that after only 7,000 I have lost alot of power. The engine struggles to startup cold and the oil is no longer doing anything to quiet the engine down. Very dissapointed at the longevity of the oil. The pressure is almost non existant once the engine warms up.
I will have to move the next change forward a bit. I won't be using Penrite though. The sales pitch was that it was the best oil available. The proof is that I have never had a worse result from any other oil I have ever used.
So to those people who warned me about Penrite. Thankyou, you were right.
Dave
try fuchs ultralube 1540 diesel.
http://www.mothfukle-engineering.com/
That is a big shame, not to mention the extra fuel a rubbish overweight oil uses through it's useful life, there is a lot of bulldust around oils, people are suckers for average oils for 4 reasons, marketing, expensive so it must be good beliefs, mates recommendations and manufacturers recommendations.MuddyTroll wrote:Just touching base.
It's been around 7,000kms since my initial post.
Used Penrite and as I initially stated, the pressure was all good, the engine sounded good and the power was as good as it was going to get.
Sad to say that after only 7,000 I have lost alot of power. The engine struggles to startup cold and the oil is no longer doing anything to quiet the engine down. Very dissapointed at the longevity of the oil. The pressure is almost non existant once the engine warms up.
I will have to move the next change forward a bit. I won't be using Penrite though. The sales pitch was that it was the best oil available. The proof is that I have never had a worse result from any other oil I have ever used.
So to those people who warned me about Penrite. Thankyou, you were right.
Dave
A person can be stuck sometimes within a warranty period to use an average oil but once outside of it science will come to the rescue if interested enough to bother.
IMO try dello not because I use it but because it does actually work well outside of all the typical bull hype, it is cheap, very shear stable, very good soot handling ability, world renowned to the highest levels in commercial trucking and lastly it contains a nice dollop of molly over and above what would already be a top shelf oil.
Heaps more to it but the above is enough to equal near any other oil out there but when price is included a person will need to double it and go to a certain and specific brand of fully synthetic to know they are doing better.
*JUST LUV IT* 96 GQ LWB TD4.2, Cav, Kings, Dobinsons, Motorguard, Enginesaver, 400 pro, Cooper ST's (rolls eyes), fleetguard oil filters, Delo 400 engine oil, Delo ESI gearbox oil and an RTC.
how much do you know about the rimula x?
not sure whether to stick with what ive been using or go to the delo, my pressures seem a little low, but the motor hasnt been complaining, and i wont know if its causing an issue til it gets decommissioned, but the way i look at is, im making less pressure, but that must mean the oil getting to the places its needed easier, and its not like its making crap pressure...
not sure whether to stick with what ive been using or go to the delo, my pressures seem a little low, but the motor hasnt been complaining, and i wont know if its causing an issue til it gets decommissioned, but the way i look at is, im making less pressure, but that must mean the oil getting to the places its needed easier, and its not like its making crap pressure...
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
Rimula is good stuff, strictly dello is better but under a standard oil change schedule and useage it's an either/or, I would if you already trust and feel comfortable with the rimula only consider changing if the price made it worth your while.love ke70 wrote:how much do you know about the rimula x?
not sure whether to stick with what ive been using or go to the delo, my pressures seem a little low, but the motor hasnt been complaining, and i wont know if its causing an issue til it gets decommissioned, but the way i look at is, im making less pressure, but that must mean the oil getting to the places its needed easier, and its not like its making crap pressure...
Yeah oil pressure (within reason) is just part of the picture, a good oil in an engine protecting it well is better than an average oil protecting average even if the oil pressure looks a little nicer.
cheers
*JUST LUV IT* 96 GQ LWB TD4.2, Cav, Kings, Dobinsons, Motorguard, Enginesaver, 400 pro, Cooper ST's (rolls eyes), fleetguard oil filters, Delo 400 engine oil, Delo ESI gearbox oil and an RTC.
read the first page. they already did. it's still garbage oil thoughYom wrote:careful someone might flame you that its the best in the world and they've run it in their truck since the beginning of time and it still goes.brad-chevlux wrote:
Finally. some one who agrees with me about Penrite.
http://www.mothfukle-engineering.com/
I been using Caltex RX for ages and have never really looked at anything else. I'm a bit concerned about the 'high detergent' post so i'll keep an eye on that...unfortunately i've got enough RX to do the next 5 oil changes .
Are Delo 400 and Rimula x synthetic or semi synthetic oils?
Are Delo 400 and Rimula x synthetic or semi synthetic oils?
1991 GQ TD42 Safari, 5spd, 4" Lift, 35" shovels, Locked & Loaded.
if youve been using it for ages, the high detergent factor isnt going to be an issue as far as i can tell...
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
no i'd have thought it would have been a good thing. pretty sure castrol RX is what is considered one of the higher detergency oils, havent read anything since which would suggest otherwise (take note though, all diesel oils are high detergency compared to petrol oils)
sludge and varnish clog things up and if they're hiding other problems then nothing you can do will escape the simple fact that you have to fix something eventually.
sludge and varnish clog things up and if they're hiding other problems then nothing you can do will escape the simple fact that you have to fix something eventually.
Nick (woop) ran from new his 89 model GQ on Rimula X.. 5000klms oil and genuine filters each time.love ke70 wrote:my question was, do the pressures on the rimula x seem high enough to give protection at high load, low rpm points?
At 550,000 took the head off, and you could still see cross hatching in the bores from new... - so does it protect?? Fawkin oath.
There were photos in his engine rebuild thread but were lost when the server died.
I ran it in my GQ, and now the GU.
did he do bearings at the same time? how were they?
ive seen a few cars with huge blow by issues, pull the head and still see the crosshatching in the bores, seems to be rings and ringlands that are more of an issue these days, no more wearing a groove in the bore,but good to hear it can make a motor last that long
ive seen a few cars with huge blow by issues, pull the head and still see the crosshatching in the bores, seems to be rings and ringlands that are more of an issue these days, no more wearing a groove in the bore,but good to hear it can make a motor last that long
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
in a as good as sealed system, wheres it going to evaporate to?
unless it goes out through PCV, but i dont think it would really work like that.
and with the engine flush stuff, isnt it just the same as running a high detergent oil where you can upset sludge and move it from somewhere not causing harm to getting stuck and blocking a big end journal or a piston squirter etc?
unless it goes out through PCV, but i dont think it would really work like that.
and with the engine flush stuff, isnt it just the same as running a high detergent oil where you can upset sludge and move it from somewhere not causing harm to getting stuck and blocking a big end journal or a piston squirter etc?
97 GQ patrol coilcab. TD42, safari turbo kit with fiddled turbo, D-GAS kit. dyno results to come...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
4inch lift, king springs, efs and procomp shocks
315/70R16 cooper ST's
found fuel economy...
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