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I am in the process of purchasing a boat that has a Cummins 330 engine - 2001 - with 170 hrs. The Oil analysis came back with Na (sodium)count of 253, Al (Aluminum) is 37, Cu (Copper) is 4, and Pb (Lead) is 0 The mechanic that checked the engine suppects leaking head gasket, cracked head etc. which the seller has no problem repairing. My question is how can I know what (if any) damage to bearings pistons etc. might have occurred? Any advice would be appreciated.

Thanks, Jack
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Hi Jack,
Simple answer is you can't......
The analysis is like a fingerprint...it won't tell you the health of the individual who made it. The oil could have been changed 2 hours before the sample was taken or the wear particles could be settled out. Cummins normally recomends a max of 60 ppm NA before they get really excited. You can get the mechanic to perform a coolent pressure test with the base pan off and try to determine how bad the leak is. If the leak isn't bad then prhaps the engine is worth a rebuild. The problem is you just don't know. You can consider making a deal with the seller. Change the oil run the engine for 30 minutes and then take a sample run for another 10 hours and resample again. If the NA has increassed by ~ >15 PPM run......

regards.....
Just a tip , some newer oils are using a performance additive"s" that is picked up in analysis as sodium . I have forgotten the names of these additives but some oils are using rather large amounts of this .

These days it might be a good idea to send in a new oil sample for a baseline . That's how I found out about the additives .
Some oils (usually older type oils) use Na as a detergency dispersancy additive in place of some Ca. You should recognise this, as Ca will decrease in the same ratio as Na is increasing. We see this a lot with bus companies where the driver tops up with any oil along the road while on a trip. It makes it that much more difficult to detect an internal coolant leak.
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