A quick phone call to Geno's got some stuff headed my way and then I asked to speak with Robert Patton concerning his opinion on the new CK-4 designation. He said to use it, you don't have any choice, and it is backwards compatible. In fact, he said John Martin has written an article for the next issue of TDR concerning the new designation and contained in that article is a story that is going to knock the socks off a sacred cow, the relationship between a major manufacturer of Diesel engines and the oil that they recommend. Not wishing to steal John's thunder, I won't go into the details but now agree with Killer's statement that the best course of action is to use the cheapest oil available that meets the API, CK-4 rating. Of course I will continue to conduct OA's and change my oil on a regular schedule, paying attention to both mileage and time, and TBN's, but the curtain has been pulled back and I've seen the Wizard of Oz. Don't miss the next issue of TDR!
- Ed
First off I salute you for being brave enough to go first and look forward to your UOA results.
They need to run some UOA taking their own advice and see how much variance running the "on sale oil", a different brand every month, has on the UOA. Especially an older sooty dirty IDI engine. If you are doing UOA it's best to stay with the same brand. Specifically to the Cummins engines a different additive package, a common commodity or not, can wash copper off the oil cooler, harmless, but it shoots your copper levels through the roof in an oil sample. Switching to synthetic also can have the same effect.
You do have choices in what oil you run. Strange they eliminate the older oils today when they used to keep the older spec around in the past. The "perfected" CJ-4 is still around if you look for it. At the moment there is 15w-40 CJ-4 Mystik oil on the shelf at my local (TSC) Tractor Supply store and AMSOIL still offers the older spec. (O'Reilly's still has the CJ-4 15w-
50 Mystik I run in the hot summer to keep the idle oil pressure up on an old engine.) As you are going first I suggest you run some oil samples early, like 3000 miles, and see how it's holding up. (Samples don't mean you have to change the oil, just use a vampire to pull a sample out of the dipstick tube.) Personally I have ruined CJ4 engine oil at 3000 miles, scuffed pistons from oil failure, and watched the CJ4 formula change from demands of fleet managers who were NOT getting the extended drain intervals like they were with the older oils. their past articles were COMPLETELY LACKING in information about this reformulation specific to Rotella. If that's not a warm enough fuzzy walk around a shop that's rebuilding Cummins engines and look at the ugly worn out flat tappet camshafts. Yes, there is a real risk to new oil. Keep the risk of the oil needing to be reformulated like it was in the past in mind should history repeat itself.
After looking at all the torn up camshafts I would really be interested in how "additives" specifically Lucas oil Zinc "Engine Break-In Oil Additive - TB Zinc Plus" interacts with the new additive packages in the Ck oils. From my samples it appears fine with the CJ oil and delivers results with increased zinc for my new camshaft break in.
Filters are more important than the oil and oil brand as a filter failure can instantly ruin your engine. It's time and has been suggested by other TDR members as well that a new oil filter study be done showing how many "relabeled" Orange Cans of Death are out there now. They need to cut up "used" oil filters as part of the article and see if they held up to use as some filters tear after 3000 miles while bragging that "failure is not an option".