Lost1wing
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Tim
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2020
- Threads
- 24
- Messages
- 2,606
- Reaction score
- 2,845
- Location
- West Georgia
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon
- Occupation
- Retired AMT
No no, I agree with the placebo effect. I'm not so sure on the oil pressure theory. Yes, 10 psi will make a mess. 50 psi will make more of a mess. Oil solenoid could be opened earlier or later dedending on the program. If this is modified to happen at different rpms than originally designed, more oil could be supplied during high lift. No way Stellantis will admit to a design flaw.Oil pressure didn't change, and even if it did, it won't change a physical tick due to wear.
It's still, from day one, regulated at the same pressures, and the high volume solenoid kicks the oil pump into high at the same RPM.
Phasers only handle cam timing, not the valve lift. you can advance or retard the intake valve timing, but the physical parts still do the same job with the same wear.
If your LP has a bad spot in a groove, you can rotate it on the platter, but it's still going to come under the stylus. You just changed when, not how.
(I watch the oil pressure as well as other engine and vehicle indicators fairly closely - and have on all of my vehicles. It's why I have the rally gauges in my SX4 and the AMX cluster in my Javelin)
the update can't make a tick go away. It's simply impossible. There's nothing a PCM can do to make physical damage disappear. If you arrive with a tick, you leave with a tick. It doesn't matter what people say - could be a placebo effect, hey, I don't notice it now - but it will still be there because you can't alter physical damage with software.
30 psi is more than enough for an idling engine. 20 is plenty for idle for that matter, even for a larger engine with a lower volume pump. Pressure doesn't lubricate valve train parts. 10 psi will send oil shooting over a fender.
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