Judd
Active Member
- Thread starter
- #46
Zinc was a thing in much higher levels exceeding 1500ppm in old style race rod and flat tappet style rockers which did not feature a roller rocker . It was also common for big V-Twin flat tappet air cooled motorcycle engines to use such oil.
As Zinc is applied over and over and over through countless hours and heat cycles it attaches itself to metal parts this then in return left a sacrificial zinc zddp coating thereby softening or quieting the tappet. It literally did nothing more than coat everything. Molybdelum ( Moly) does the same thing coats things over time. Someone got smart a few years back even figured out it can coat projectiles used in weaponry , and it did speed up the projectile but what they discovered was the moly was slowly coating the barrels and then accuracy fell off the map not to mention it made the weapon very dirty.
Now with Zinc and Moly to imagine those 2 additives going into a modern engine that has solenoid that push high pressure oil to open up the high side of the lifters is troubling. It would eventually straight Gum up the works .
In today's oils especially modern synthetics additive such as Hybrid Ash is used the base oils of modern synthetic oils are so refined that oils of old even with additive could never come close to the strength of the film that is left on the metal by modern oils.
Modern oils for the win.
I sorta doubt zinc would be the problem you think it would be or describing. Find me one 3.6 that has been ruined by zinc "gumming up the works" and I'll eat my words. Till then, you are just pontificating on something that has no real world basis.
I do know this and I don't have to pontificate, zinc was not removed due to soleniods actuation in variable timing set-ups, it was removed because it (along with sulfur, phosphorous and moly) doesn't play well with cats.
I also know the 3.6 does in fact have cam/rocker issues as does the Hemi. Matter of fact, "wiping a cam lobe or a rocker" has gotten to be almost common place even on mild builds of flat tappet engines, even those with mild ramping cams and lowish spring rates. Back in the day, the only time we really worried about cam/lifter/rocker damage was when breaking in big lift cam and usually, the high spring rates that go with them. Slap moly lube on the lobes and hope for the best. If the cam got through the first 30 minuts,,,,, you were usually good to go.
What changed? Modern oils for win I reckon.....
But none of that matters. The 3.6 does in fact have cam/rocker issues and Stellanis should have already done something about it. They have not which is why I decided to research and do my own thing. As I stated, I'm convinced the issue is a result of several issues and not one single thing. I do my best to work around those issues by using an oil with proven good oil analysis results even though many experts will decry as too thick, changing it at 5K vs whatever the Stallanis algorithym says, I defeated stop and go and try to mitigate long idling (understand, I overland alot, slept in my vehicle two nights a week for a year so my results are relative and not usually apples to apples).
But it the end, I came here just trying to find out what the most common failure mode for the leaking oil cooler issue was so I could make a better guess as to if the seal swelling snake oil might be able to address the issue and it turned into everthing but that.
BTW folks, another week with the leak apparently mitigated. Blue Devil for the win I reckon. But hey, I will be buying an aluminum Dorman oil cooler kit to have "just in case" and in all fairness to the scientific method, I'll chime in peridically to update and if the Blue Devil snake oil "ruins my delicate, complicated modern engine", I report that too.
In the mean time, it's no longer leaking oil to the point of smoking due to oil on the exhaust, no more burt oil smell, haven't added any oil in two weeks all the while my wife's car sits at the shop awaiting part. So far, about as good as my luck gets.
Y'all have a good un.
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