ShadowsPapa
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Not all of them. Some actually lose protection or even have a breakdown point worse than the best traditional oils.Synthetic oil flash points are in the 350-400 deg range, so the oil did not vaporize, shear strength loss starting, yeah prob
I'm also talking threshold or onset of thermal breakdown - which is far lower than 300 for some oils.
The onset of “Thermal Breakdown” is determined by the temperature at which the oil begins to smoke/vaporize. This indicates that the lighter components in the oil are beginning to boil off, which changes the oil’s chemical composition for the worse. Always keep your oil below the point of thermal breakdown. If your oil does get too hot, then change it ASAP.
Here are some numbers at which point the oil actually started to vaporize - not enough to cross NOACK numbers, which was way out there until recently. NOACK testing heats oil to extremes for an hour and then measures the loss of volume - that says nothing about the ability to protect or break down point. And yes, it can start to vaporize at 300 or less - and you can bet with coolant at 270 the oil was over 300........
These are points at which the oil actually begins to vaporize:
SYNTHETIC GASOLINE ENGINE OILS:
10W30 Amsoil Dominator Racing Oil, synthetic = 300* F
10W30 Amsoil Z-Rod Oil, synthetic = 300* F
5W30 Pennzoil Ultra Platinum, API SN, GM dexos 1 approved, synthetic = 290*F (high temp tested late 2015)
5W30 Joe Gibbs Driven LS30 Performance Motor Oil, synthetic = 290* F
Further testing showed that some synthetic oils have breakdown temps of lower than the best conventional oils. Averages, yes, synthetics are better, but it's a whopping 10 degrees difference if you average the oils. The AVERAGE synthetic is only 10 degrees better than the average conventional oil.
In short, don't rely on it just being synthetic, make sure it's a GOOD synthetic, otherwise my conventional oil could beat the next guy's synthetic.
Testing has shown that oil protection levels in PSI film strength can drop significantly from 230 degrees compared to 275 - sometimes the protection drops well over 10%.
And the parts that are lost first when it gets hot may not cause instant damage, but it causes trouble down the road. Damage can be long-term, something you'd not notice until into the future.
BTW - AMSOIL is among the best for resisting breakdown and even when operated on the edge, the protection loss is among the least of synthetics.
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