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More and long Re: Oil Pressure-Cause for concern???

To: jboatri@emory.edu
Subject: More and long Re: Oil Pressure-Cause for concern???
From: Daniel1312@aol.com
Date: Sat, 23 Oct 1999 15:06:39 EDT
Cc: spridgets@autox.team.net
Reply-to: Daniel1312@aol.com
Sender: owner-spridgets@autox.team.net
The oil pressure is governed by both the power of the oil pump which 
increases with rpm being driven at half engine speed and the bearing 
clearances (I think).  As the bearings wear the clearances increases and 
pressure drops.

Yes, there comes a point when too much oil pressure is not only required but 
can be a bad thing (Lotus 1585 twin cam never liked a lot of pressure).

However, too low a pressure, especially when the engine temperatures are 
high, can result in a break down of the oil film - resulting in damage.  With 
low oil pressure (I think) the film can break down more easily.  A higher 
viscosity oil will break down (the film) less easily at high temperatures but 
 can make the pump work harder when the oil is cold because the oil is 
thicker.  A thing about multigrade oils is that the two numbers refer to 
respective viscosity at different temperatures - I think that is the 
simpliest summary I can manager without running to 2,000 words.  Here is the 
advantage of the 5/50  and 15/50 Mobil 1 synthetic as oppose a 20/50 which is 
actually thicker at a cold temperature while not getting any thinner at the 
top end (50).  A synthetic also does not break down at very high 
temperatures, as found in turbocharger centre bearings and extreme operating 
conditions (maybe low oil pressure and high engine temperature).  I don't 
think STP does any harm to an engine with low oil pressure unless it increase 
the viscosity at extreme low temperatures (like in the Artic circle?).  Some 
additives, not sure about STP contain additives that do more than just 
increase viscosity and protect bearings when the oil film either breaks down 
(ZDDP?) or prevent the break down (Teflon?).


Daniel1312 - who has seen an engine with STP almost go off the gauge on a 
cold start!


In a message dated 23/10/99 19:23:01 GMT Daylight Time, jboatri@emory.edu 
writes:

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