I have mentioned in several threads my current involvement in doing a relatively long term test on extended oil drains, using Delo 400 15/40 as the media under test. I'm doing this for several reasons:
1. To attempt to establish and show that you don't HAVE to use high priced synthetics to employ extended drains, as many do to recover the substantially higher cost of the synthetics.
2. To show that bypass filtration will greatly assist in normal, and extended oil usage.
3. That those nasty K&N air filters, when installed and maintained properly, WILL deliver excellent filtering capability. Ditto the Frantz toilet paper bypass oil filters.
A spin-off of the above, was my decision to send 3 identical oil samples to 3 different oil analyzers, to see what variations would surface in their reports - and to at least try to form some useful conclusion based upon that test.
To form at least some baseline for the above test, I found analysis reports on new, unused Delo 400 15/40 from 2 of the analyzers I selected in order to see what variations there were on the new oil - keeping in mind the the new oils sampled were done at different times and from different oil batches - still an interesting comparison.
The analyzers I used were, Blackstone, CAT, and Oil Analyzers.
Here's the 2 baseline samples:
Test was done by Oil Analyzers
Iron 1ppm
Magnesium 23ppm
Calcium 3343 ppm
Barium 0ppm
Phophorous 1116ppm
Zinc 1376ppm
Molybdenum 0ppm
Titanium 0ppm
Vanadium 0ppm
Potassium 0ppm
VIS@100C 15. 95cSt
Tbn 10. 63
From Blackstone Labs, 5/10/04
Chevron Delo 400 15W40 CI-4
Al-1
Iron-2
Lead-1
Silicon-5
Sodium-1Calcium-3476
Magnesium-6
Phos-1190
Zinc-1329
Vis@210F-80. 5
Flashpoint-450F
TBN-not tested
Presumably, values not displayed were Zero - but do note the TBN value shown on the Oil Analyzer's sample.
MORE BELOW...
1. To attempt to establish and show that you don't HAVE to use high priced synthetics to employ extended drains, as many do to recover the substantially higher cost of the synthetics.
2. To show that bypass filtration will greatly assist in normal, and extended oil usage.
3. That those nasty K&N air filters, when installed and maintained properly, WILL deliver excellent filtering capability. Ditto the Frantz toilet paper bypass oil filters.
A spin-off of the above, was my decision to send 3 identical oil samples to 3 different oil analyzers, to see what variations would surface in their reports - and to at least try to form some useful conclusion based upon that test.
To form at least some baseline for the above test, I found analysis reports on new, unused Delo 400 15/40 from 2 of the analyzers I selected in order to see what variations there were on the new oil - keeping in mind the the new oils sampled were done at different times and from different oil batches - still an interesting comparison.
The analyzers I used were, Blackstone, CAT, and Oil Analyzers.
Here's the 2 baseline samples:
Test was done by Oil Analyzers
Iron 1ppm
Magnesium 23ppm
Calcium 3343 ppm
Barium 0ppm
Phophorous 1116ppm
Zinc 1376ppm
Molybdenum 0ppm
Titanium 0ppm
Vanadium 0ppm
Potassium 0ppm
VIS@100C 15. 95cSt
Tbn 10. 63
From Blackstone Labs, 5/10/04
Chevron Delo 400 15W40 CI-4
Al-1
Iron-2
Lead-1
Silicon-5
Sodium-1Calcium-3476
Magnesium-6
Phos-1190
Zinc-1329
Vis@210F-80. 5
Flashpoint-450F
TBN-not tested
Presumably, values not displayed were Zero - but do note the TBN value shown on the Oil Analyzer's sample.
MORE BELOW...
Last edited: