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Best additive used in the market....why?|
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Bronze Member - 1 or more posts |
What is the best stuff out there and why? When I go to the store to buy a quality additive all of them seem to tout the same thing, yet you hear many negative things about how many of the common ones on the shelf are snake oil? I saw this on a post the other day http://www.columbusgasprices.com/Forum_MSG.aspx?master=...pic=147664&page_no=9
and went to Kmart to check it out. $17.99 was the price, and I checked out the site. Anyone heard anything about it? It's called XenTx? All Ya'll Suckas Can't Step Wit Dis! |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
The more that I keep reading these forums, the more it just keeps reinforcing that aftermarket oil additives are a bad idea.
Everybody tells me to start off with a quality oil that you would like to use, a good quality aftermarket filter, a reasonable OCI if you don't plan on doing a UOA on the oil, and be happy in ignorance at the lines and lines of useless chemicals on that oil additive shelf in the auto parts store. This formula has worked for me, and I have asked about oil additives and fuel additives myself. They just seem to be pouring more money into something that has been researched and tested already for us, and by using them has the potential for offsetting a balance that, while it won't kill the engine, will actually shorten the useable life of the oil that you are using. Stay away...stay far far away... |
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Bronze Member - 1 or more posts |
I have heard that additives are a waste as well, but it seems to me that more and more in the industrial market large companies have a great need to save fuel consumption, extend maintainance, and reduce wear metals so that the equipment does actually last longer. They are the ones with the money to be able to test these "new" products. This need to save is becoming more and more of a necessity due to the constant rise in fuel prices and there has to be some sort of breakthrough technology that the oil companies can't buy out and suppress because the potential to make the money from the consumers is begining to balance out or outweigh what the oil companies can pay them for their technology. Not all of business is driven by greed and a desire to make money. I believe there are people still existing who want to save the consumer more money on the bottom line and in some small way stick it to big corporate america by taking money away from those monopolies. Lets face facts, one way would be by having an additive that actually works and does what it claims. Even though it is a "snake oil" market, and people generally look at anything in the arena as such, there has to be some sort of breakthrough at some point, wouldn't you agree? Maybe this XenTx is one. It certainly doesn't look like the wheel being re-invented like many of the other products in existence today. Has anyone done any independent tests on it they are willing to share, or any other info?
All Ya'll Suckas Can't Step Wit Dis! |
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Premium Member - 250 or more posts |
I vote Valvoline Synpower Oil Treatment (15 oz platinum color bottle) one of the best. I had a new oil analysis done on it this March (Butler Catapillar Lab, Bismark ND). Anything less than 10 ppm is ignored:
Elemental Analysis (ppm) Alum: 34 Sodium: 23 Moly: 2324 Boron: 1046 Calcium: 1050 Magnesium: 968 Phosphorus: 1792 Zinc: 1740 Viscosity cSt @ 100C: 74.6.0 Note the viscosity. This will boost the viscosity of your oil. Some use only an ounce per quart of oil, but the instructions are the whole bottle in one crankcase of oil. One user has consistently found lower iron in used oil analysis with this add at 1 oz per qt. |
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Premium Member - 250 or more posts |
Another excellent additive (and I will add in all likelihood far better than the additive posted above), in the words of it's creator:
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
If using RL then moly and Zinc are already high.
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
SpeedoMan,
One needs look at these additives with a cost vs performance attitude . In cost vs performance there are true synthetics out there that will smoke any DOPED mineral based oil . That said , it's costly to dope the few really good synthetics with anything . If your synthetic needs doping ,pick another brand I don't know what that product you speak about in the link is but the Valvoline additive above does lower Fe in analysis when used with many OTC mineral oils . It also can help better fuel economy and bump the TBN at only 1 ounce per quart without unwanted thickening of the oil . Most engines can be treated 3 times with one 15 ounce bottle " 30-35 cents per ounce " . But , show me a better additive at same or lower cost in this cost vs performance deal I speak of and I'll listen but at the present time I don't know of any new additives that can beat using a good choice of motor oil and maintenance intervals based on type oil used . |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
TallPaul, I have another angle of that product that you mention from Specialty Formulations: would it be possible to add that to a very high quality 10w40 oil, and get the additive package up to the snuff of the additive package of 15w40 weight diesel oils.
I ask this because I found a very good synthetic based oil, but is in 10w40 weight, and was wanting to use this oil for winter in my 5.9 Cummins diesel engine. Yes, I know that there are very good 15w40 oils already, but I was looking for just a little thinner, but not detrimentally so, and the HT/HS of the oil in question is very high, making it very much in the commercial engine requirement range, but I am concerned about the wear/detergent package, hence why I ask if this would work. Or should a rethinking be required of me? |
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Premium Member - 250 or more posts |
Not sure the SX-UP is going to give you ALL the attributes of an HDEO, but may come close. If the oil you plan to use already meets the minimum requirement for light duty diesel, then I think you would be fine.
I want to throw out another additive, that looks very good. It's Powerservice Diesel Lube Oil Extender. A recent new oil analysis showed Calcium: 6281 ppm Magnesium:736 ppm Phosphorus: 3548 ppm Zinc: 3357 ppm Best of all, it only has a viscosity of 20 cSt at 100C, so it won't appreciably thicken your oil. And the other good part, only $19 for a 3 quart jug at Walmart. |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
The Valvoline Premium Blue Extreme 5w-40 w/o any additional additives makes financial sense here .
Here's a TSB for you . http://dodgeram.info/tsb/2001/09-003-01.htm
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
What do you want to do with an additive? There are some useful ones, and a lot of other ones. Is there something your gas or oil needs?
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Bronze Member - 1 or more posts |
All of you guys who makes complain in additive in oil i want you to know that there is already an oil additive that is one of a kind oil its called Engine Protector(EP)try using this and tell me if that doesnt work on your engine...This is the World first Alkalined based oil no one else in the market today...for your order pls contact me dex_6000@yahoo.com
Beats all Highly super synthetic oil in the market.... |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
Well , I will not email you or even google your product , but will read more information about what your selling if you post here .
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
LOL bruce |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
Does it beat ordinary low life synthetic oil, too? Tell us more. Or, like the song asks, is that all there is?
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
...would an alkaline based oil fight with a PAO or POE based oil?
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
Chlorinated alkanes work well as EP or anti scuff but under heat break down and form HCL acid NOT good even when inhibited as they say good as a cutting oil but with low TBN oils a corroison problem. Bye the way Chlor additives have been used in heavy locomotive oil for years BUT that oil is monitored for acid and TBN depletion on a routine bassis somethjing most people will not do and as such with the oil killinmg effect of acids formed by the chlor additive IMHO it is not suited for normal PCMO use.
bruce |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
I have to wonder how long it would take of constant use of some of these shelf additives for evidence of bore polishing and other non-repairable damage to crop up .... if it's going to .
I'm not certain analysis can tell if the dispersant is being jacked with as just one example . Not additive related but I have seen an analysis of oil that looked fairly good then the oil pan was dropped and the bearings was coming apart . Can anyone else name off any tell-tale signs of potential harm from long term use . Burning oil would come fairly gradual and same for seals leaking so I'd presume at times those might simply be laid off to age and miles ? Thoughts ? |
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Bronze Member - 1 or more posts |
motorbike, I'm not doubting your knowledge or experience but I do question your understanding of the benefits and requirements of a regular oil sampling program. I've managed the service dept for a heavy equipment dealership for approx 5 years and we encouraged regular oil sampling.
A single oil sample is sort of like seeing one still frame of a movie and trying to figure out the plot from it. Oil sampling is a trending tool and should be used to track ongoing levels of wear metals and contaminants. You could view one lab report on a new engine's break- in oil and be convinced that not only was the wrong oil being used, but that the engine was about to have a catastrophic failure. If you got a lab report on oil that showed it to be fine and then dropped the pan and found bearings coming apart you either need a new lab, need to learn the proper procedure to obtain an oil sample (when and where to draw it from, identify the system the oil came from, identify the type of fluid it is, etc). The lab doesn't have a magic bullet analysis. They need to know what kind of lubricant you've sent them, whether it came from an engine, trans, transfer case, diff, etc and then they test for specific contaminants and wear metals associated with that fluid and type of system. Again, my intention is not to belittle you, only to clarify that oil sampling is a lab process and unless samples are switched or they've received insufficient or incorrect information, isn't going to miss significant enough levels of wear metal to "not catch" bearings coming apart. |
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Double Platinum Member - 100 or more posts |
Absolutely true! End of story! |
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