Comodave
Moderator Emeritus
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2015
- Messages
- 22,462
- Location
- Au Gres, MI
- Vessel Name
- Black Dog
- Vessel Make
- Formula 41PC
Yes, Rotella comes in 30 weight.
I went by the manual suggestion for viscosity, also deciding that Volvo recommending Volvo oil didn't make as much sense as going with top oil companies' published research. So, I read published info from Shell (Rotella) and Exxon - the pioneer in synthetic oils, Mobil 1. Reading as much as possible research from any source I could find - did you know that there is a study of lubricants called "Tribology"? I read that trade association's publications on line - anything I could find on lubricity, just for the fun of it. (Life of the party, don't you know.....)
The research I found covered so much about compensating for increasingly low sulfur fuels with excellent lubricity formulations and additives in the oil. But the bottom line is that synthetics hold up longer, have reduced risk of shearing, maintain viscosity longer, remove carbon build up more effectively, etc. There are even independent tests of diesel over the road fleet engine oil performance, where durability and fuel efficiency, reduced deposits, lower maintenance costs, longer engine life, etc., mean so much t o trucking companies' profitability. Believing that science does make a difference, and that the science is out there in spades builds confidence. So, I choose Exxon's Mobil 1 heavy duty diesel 15W40 or Shell's Rotella 15W40. Truthfully, in my April 15 to Thanksgiving boating year, a 20W-40 or even 20W-50 would be OK, and straight 30 with longer warm up periods would be OK here in paradise (North Carolina). But, the manual says 15W40, so I go with that in two highly reputable major oil companies top synthetic brands - Mobil 1 and Rotella 6, with the stats behind each to know I'm doing all that I can do in that department. I wish I could do so well in forecasting the weather.........
15:40 was the correct oil for a Diesel engine, I wish you wouldn’t have responded if you didn’t know because you confused me and I ended up using 1040 in both engines (10 gallons) My mechanic said not to worry but all the same don’t interject opinions if you don’t know what your talking about. ��
Hi Eric,
Just curious. How often do you change oil?
Oh boy, now just wait for a bunch of responses saying that synthetics are not necessary or worth the cost despite the science. The typical response - I've been using Dino oil for forty years with good results. Or - the manual says straight 30 weight. Yup, that's a good one, as if today's oils are the same as what was 40 years ago.
NC heaven,
All of what you dug up is true and I’m aware of it.
But I stick w 30w dino as a function of need.
We don’t need the synthetic if we change oil often. Changing often is IMO more beneficial than extended change intervals because we get the contaminants out of the oil .. by removing the oil. Carbon, dirt, water, chemicals and other degradation elements like sheered oil molecules. Oil always turns black in time and I don’t think there’s any doubt it’s contaminated when that happens.
We run trawlers and our fluid temps stay very cool. No high temps. I run my boat at a 50% load and think that’s equal to or higher than most others here. That’s 50%load (not 50% rpm) and at those low loads we just don’t generate enough heat to need synthetic oil’s temperature stability. And that is synthetic oil’s main advantage. I think this is a true statement ... “syn oil is so temp stable it dos’nt need any viscosity stabilizers called viscosity improvers. Ever heard of a single weight synthetic oil? No ... because syn oil is a mv oil w/o any VI’s at all. At one time VI’s were rubber balls” .. don’t know what they are now.
VI are not a lubricant and do nothing to directly lubricate your engine. Lubricity is reduced by VI’s. Over the road trucks need multi-vis oil as they travel widely and encounter temps over a very wide range. Not so in our boats. No freezing temps at all.
Some say/think that mv is needed to help get the oil to the bearings during start-up. Not so at all IMO. An old wife’s tale so to speak. The lube oil is pumped by a gear to gear pump and since oil (in this context) is not compressible the oil volume pumped is constant as are the holes/galleries that the oil is pumped through. The thick oil gets to the bearings at the same rate/speed as thin oil.
Also the only lubrication the bearings have is the residual oil from when the engine was run last and if that was a higher viscosity oil better lubrication will be achieved at start-up.
So I change oil more often and use a single weight dino oil.
NChavan wrote;
“and the data on removing carbon is strongly in favor of synthetics.”
Haven’t heard that. Why wouldn’t changing oil more often be better in this regard?
NC heaven,
All of what you dug up is true and I’m aware of it.
But I stick w 30w dino as a function of need.
We don’t need the synthetic if we change oil often. Changing often is IMO more beneficial than extended change intervals because we get the contaminants out of the oil .. by removing the oil. Carbon, dirt, water, chemicals and other degradation elements like sheered oil molecules. Oil always turns black in time and I don’t think there’s any doubt it’s contaminated when that happens.
We run trawlers and our fluid temps stay very cool. No high temps. I run my boat at a 50% load and think that’s equal to or higher than most others here. That’s 50%load (not 50% rpm) and at those low loads we just don’t generate enough heat to need synthetic oil’s temperature stability. And that is synthetic oil’s main advantage. I think this is a true statement ... “syn oil is so temp stable it dos’nt need any viscosity stabilizers called viscosity improvers. Ever heard of a single weight synthetic oil? No ... because syn oil is a mv oil w/o any VI’s at all. At one time VI’s were rubber balls” .. don’t know what they are now.
VI are not a lubricant and do nothing to directly lubricate your engine. Lubricity is reduced by VI’s. Over the road trucks need multi-vis oil as they travel widely and encounter temps over a very wide range. Not so in our boats. No freezing temps at all.
Some say/think that mv is needed to help get the oil to the bearings during start-up. Not so at all IMO. An old wife’s tale so to speak. The lube oil is pumped by a gear to gear pump and since oil (in this context) is not compressible the oil volume pumped is constant as are the holes/galleries that the oil is pumped through. The thick oil gets to the bearings at the same rate/speed as thin oil.
Also the only lubrication the bearings have is the residual oil from when the engine was run last and if that was a higher viscosity oil better lubrication will be achieved at start-up.
So I change oil more often and use a single weight dino oil.
NChavan wrote;
“and the data on removing carbon is strongly in favor of synthetics.”
Haven’t heard that. Why wouldn’t changing oil more often be better in this regard?
I'm with you and Ted - Syn if required / specified - That's what I run in my car as its speced and sees a wider use temp range.Ted says re syn oils “if the application requires them”.
I don’t use any syn oil now but when flying ultralights early on I got on the syn bandwagon. The little 2-stroke engines ran often for a considerable time at WOT and the leanest mixture that wouldn’t seize the piston to the cylinder wall.
But our trawler engines run way cool. No need for syn oil.
And re your link Don it’s full of good stuff but I differ on the viscosity stuff.
Glad you guys are still reading my posts.
Thought I was using syn on my 06 Avalon. It’s so cheap I go to the dealer. It’s Mobil 1. Didn’t know Mobil even made dino but eventually I found out. At first I was disappointed. But then I thought about what I say on TF and realized the duty cycle for my car was the same as my boat. Live in a moderate climate, drive at very moderate engine loads and don’t experience hot weather. But the Mobil 1 dino they put in my Avalon is 5-w30. So I decided I had no need for syn oil for my Avalon. My other cars (95 Camry and 87 Nissan Stanza) both use 10-30w high milage dino oil.
NCheaven,
Your coolant temp isn’t your engine temp. The coolant is kept much hotter than it normally would be by the thermostat. If you had a gauge for your oil temp .. that would be very close to the real engine temp. And the lube oil system is also a cooling system. But w/o a thermostat. The temp of the pistons and valves would be engine temp but we have no indicators for them.
Don,
Viscosity of lube oils for marine engines almost always recommend 30w oil. They recommend 15-40w also and other viscosities as well. They realize most people will use MV but 30w is recommended just like 15-40w. Since most people think more modern oils are better .. just because they ..usually are. And most people think modern things are universally better. But as I try to point out “better” .. at what? MV oils are needed in certain or most applications like a truck or most cars. But it’s not needed and actually a bit better to just use straight weight oil in our boats.
Cat Jack,
I’m surprised there is a straight weight syn oil. I wonder if it is. Since syn oil has MV properties w/o any viscosity improvers it seems to me that syn oil w/o VI would test as a MV and therefore need to be classified as a MV oil. How can a syn oil test like straight wight oil?
A straight syn oil w/o VI if it had the properties of 30w dino oil at the high temps specified would test at something other than 30w at the lower temp range of testing.
But it even gets more complicated than that. Syn oil is made from various base stocks that (I’m sure) have various viscosity properties.
So I don’t understand syn straight weight oil.