10,000 Mile Oil Changes:

Inspector #20

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Ok,

Just to preface this, I grew up the son of a NASCAR Crew Chief, working as an apprentice in his shop. I went on to teach driving for both the Porsche Club of North America and The Lamborghini Academy, and I worked on aircraft as well, so I have a very analytical background when it comes to machines and lubrication.

Back in 2012, I was working for an exotic car restoration shop called The Creative Workshop (in Florida) when I discovered an amazing German motor oil called Rheinol.

The virgin oil Analysis was simply off the charts compared to Mobil-1. Far more additives, greater thermal stability, better detergency and better viscosity stability at high temperatures.

The downside is it's very, very hard to find.

When I bought Yellow Mustang in March of 2016, it had 54,000 miles on it and had only received Mobil-1 5/30 changed every 3,500 miles.

Early tests (laboratory analysis) of Mobil-1 in my former Mustang (supercharged 2001 4.6 V8 GT) indicated the Mobil-1 15/50 was still showing good additives (TBN) and stability/cleanliness when changed at 12,500 miles. (This was back before Mobil-1 offered a 25,000 mile synthetic motor oil.)

Based on the results of those periodic oil tests, I began changing oil (in my old Mustang) at 10,000 miles. At the time, I was commuting from Crestline to Palm Springs everyday, 140 miles round trip.

I switched to Rheinol Primus 5/40 in 2015. It has not only Porsche, Audio, MBZ, VW, BMW and Volvo approvals, but also Lamborghini and Maserati.

20211105_160745.jpg

In general, I try to change my oil between 5,000 and 7,500 miles, but I often go the full 10,000 because of being both busy and lazy simultaneously.

At around 212,000 miles, I developed a 'tick' in the valve training of Yellow Mustang's 4.6 litre 3-valve V8. I traced this to a bad bearing in a roller rocker arm, so I changed all 24 rocker arms.

Here's what the inside of the engine looked like after 158,000 miles of 5,000 to 10,000 mile oil changes on Rheinol Primus 5/40.

2006 Mustang 230,000 Miles.jpg

Thursday, I visited a chum with a shop to use his hoist and change my oil.

My last oil change was on 09/04/2020 @ 235,000 miles using Rheinol Primus 5/40. As always, I use genuine Motorcraft oil filters exclusively.

20211103_164542.jpg

My odometer is now showing 245,00, or just a shade over 10,000 miles on this oil change.

20211103_185140.jpg

Here's the dipstick at 10,000 miles. Still clean enough the see through. No oil burned in 10,000 miles.

20211105_155710.jpg

Continued in next post...
 
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So, I rack the Yellow Mustang and perform a general inspection and oil change.

20211105_161858.jpg

Doesn't look too bad for almost 250,000 miles...and it is driven every single day.

Now notice the front bumper has never been dragged. Keep in mind the car is dropped 2.75" lower than stock, so I am very aware of my surroundings.

20211105_161906.jpg

Now before you say I drive like a grandma, remember that I'm running a full race tune and 4.30:1 gears, so this thing is really churning at 75-80 mph.

I built the differential myself, replacing all the bearings and gears, installing carbon fiber clutches in the positraction unit and fitting a factory Ford cover from a GT500.

20211105_162027.jpg

It's nice to have access to a hoist...

20211105_161838.jpg

A car chum of mine built the tiny mufflers from T304 sheet stainless. They are a 75% scale of a Flowmaster 10 Series Single Chamber Race Muffler. The case of the muffler is the same length as a $1 bill.

The rear-mounted mufflers are surprisingly quiet and the catalytic converters also quiet the car down a lot, but the car has a unique exhaust sound that even my non-car enthusiast wife can recognize.

So, at present I am waiting on the results of the oil sample I took on Tbursday to be analyzed by Blackstone Labs.

I'll post the report when it comes in...
 
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i used to be an AMS/Oil Dealer back in the 80s, I used it in my Oldsmobile Omega, You could eat out of the inside of that engine, no sludge buildup whatsoever. I f i were to keep my vehicles for many years . AMS/Oil would be my choice hands down. Synthetic is the way to go. I use Morgan Fuels Cool Power for my 2 stroke Aircraft engines synthetic, inside they barely look like they have been run. Clean as a whistle inside my O.S engines.
 
Engine looks great. Oil changes are the single most important maintenance you can do for an engine. When I bought my 69 Corvette in 1999 I bought 2 cases of AC Delco oil filters just to make sure I always had the OEM brand. When I sold it in 2019 I still had a case left and gave that to the new owner. I’m still not trusting the new “algorithms” that new cars have to calculate oil life. My 2019 Corvette had an oil change at 2500 miles (second change) and now at 6000 miles it’s showing 0% oil life left. This is with 9.8 quarts of Mobile 1 in a dry sump system. The oil still looks clean.
 
AMSOIL INC.
American Corporation
AMSOIL INC.
AMSOIL Inc. is an American corporation based in Superior, Wisconsin that primarily formulates and packages synthetic lubricants, fuel additives, and filters. Company founder Albert J. Amatuzio developed several synthetic motor oil formulations throughout the mid-to-late 1960s. He was commercially selling synthetic motor oil by 1968. In 1972, AMSOIL 10W-40 Synthetic Motor Oil became the world's first synthetic motor oil to meet American Petroleum Institute requirements, which prompted the company to adopt "The First in Synthetics®" as its tagline. The company introduced several other synthetic lubricants that represented industry firsts throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. It distributes products in North America via a network of independent dealers following a direct-marketing business model
 
Engine looks great. Oil changes are the single most important maintenance you can do for an engine. When I bought my 69 Corvette in 1999 I bought 2 cases of AC Delco oil filters just to make sure I always had the OEM brand. When I sold it in 2019 I still had a case left and gave that to the new owner. I’m still not trusting the new “algorithms” that new cars have to calculate oil life. My 2019 Corvette had an oil change at 2500 miles (second change) and now at 6000 miles it’s showing 0% oil life left. This is with 9.8 quarts of Mobile 1 in a dry sump system. The oil still looks clean.

Good points...

With carburetors, I think more frequent oil changes are necessary due to the dilution/contamination of the fuel. I used to change the oil in my carburetor cars every 2,500 miles.

I am also suspicious of the algorithms, so I just base everything on oil analytics.

The Ford 4.6 3-Valve is one of the cleanest burning engines ever produced. This fact has an impact on oil cleanliness.

When Ford was using the 4.6 2-Valve, they had 4 catalytic converters. When the 3-valve came out, due to the redesigned combustion chamber, super-tight quench distance and spark plug central placement, they were able to drop 2 catalytic converters.
 
Engine looks great. Oil changes are the single most important maintenance you can do for an engine. When I bought my 69 Corvette in 1999 I bought 2 cases of AC Delco oil filters just to make sure I always had the OEM brand. When I sold it in 2019 I still had a case left and gave that to the new owner. I’m still not trusting the new “algorithms” that new cars have to calculate oil life. My 2019 Corvette had an oil change at 2500 miles (second change) and now at 6000 miles it’s showing 0% oil life left. This is with 9.8 quarts of Mobile 1 in a dry sump system. The oil still looks clean.

Don,

I would say have a sample analyzed at 0% and see what the TBN'S are. Just out of curiosity.

For me, I drive all freeway, so I'm fully warmed up. No short trip driving.

I know a guy with a new C8 who changes his only every 1,000 miles. Nothing wrong with that, although it's unnecessary. He also only drives it on Saturdays
 
I’m hoping to get an electric vehicle when I next buy a car, either for myself or my wife. That is still a few years off, but that’s the plan.
 
electric vehicles is great (y) -- if we all had an electric car tomorrow... they would have to burn 1MILLION times more coal (or build 1,000 more nuclear reactor plants) to try to keep the power going to FEED the electric cars---- ultimately crashing the entire grid and sending us all back to the stone age, and while dealing with what to do with all the leaking batteries .... o_O-- but Hey GO GREEN!!!:2Thumbs:

I get it "save the planet" protect the polar bears etc ...... you know the best way to do that ? in all honesty....Kill the humans ..... sorry that is the reality ...the planet was fine before us and will be just fine after us...like a dog with fleas ..... after a good bath alls well.......

have a nice day ---BUY BONDS!
 
electric vehicles is great (y) -- if we all had an electric car tomorrow... they would have to burn 1MILLION times more coal (or build 1,000 more nuclear reactor plants) to try to keep the power going to FEED the electric cars---- ultimately crashing the entire grid and sending us all back to the stone age, and while dealing with what to do with all the leaking batteries .... o_O-- but Hey GO GREEN!!!:2Thumbs:

I get it "save the planet" protect the polar bears etc ...... you know the best way to do that ? in all honesty....Kill the humans ..... sorry that is the reality ...the planet was fine before us and will be just fine after us...like a dog with fleas ..... after a good bath alls well.......

have a nice day ---BUY BONDS!
Tesla needs to get into nuclear power generation. Then we are talking complete vertical product integration.
 
electric vehicles is great (y) -- if we all had an electric car tomorrow... they would have to burn 1MILLION times more coal (or build 1,000 more nuclear reactor plants) to try to keep the power going to FEED the electric cars---- ultimately crashing the entire grid and sending us all back to the stone age, and while dealing with what to do with all the leaking batteries .... o_O-- but Hey GO GREEN!!!:2Thumbs:

I get it "save the planet" protect the polar bears etc ...... you know the best way to do that ? in all honesty....Kill the humans ..... sorry that is the reality ...the planet was fine before us and will be just fine after us...like a dog with fleas ..... after a good bath alls well.......

have a nice day ---BUY BONDS!
I hear ya!

BTW, there are more polar bears alive today than 40 years ago. THAT'S and "inconvenient truth".
 
Ok,

Just to preface this, I grew up the son of a NASCAR Crew Chief, working as an apprentice in his shop. I went on to teach driving for both the Porsche Club of North America and The Lamborghini Academy, and I worked on aircraft as well, so I have a very analytical background when it comes to machines and lubrication.

Back in 2012, I was working for an exotic car restoration shop called The Creative Workshop (in Florida) when I discovered an amazing German motor oil called Rheinol.

The virgin oil Analysis was simply off the charts compared to Mobil-1. Far more additives, greater thermal stability, better detergency and better viscosity stability at high temperatures.

The downside is it's very, very hard to find.

When I bought Yellow Mustang in March of 2016, it had 54,000 miles on it and had only received Mobil-1 5/30 changed every 3,500 miles.

Early tests (laboratory analysis) of Mobil-1 in my former Mustang (supercharged 2001 4.6 V8 GT) indicated the Mobil-1 15/50 was still showing good additives (TBN) and stability/cleanliness when changed at 12,500 miles. (This was back before Mobil-1 offered a 25,000 mile synthetic motor oil.)

Based on the results of those periodic oil tests, I began changing oil (in my old Mustang) at 10,000 miles. At the time, I was commuting from Crestline to Palm Springs everyday, 140 miles round trip.

I switched to Rheinol Primus 5/40 in 2015. It has not only Porsche, Audio, MBZ, VW, BMW and Volvo approvals, but also Lamborghini and Maserati.

View attachment 75381

In general, I try to change my oil between 5,000 and 7,500 miles, but I often go the full 10,000 because of being both busy and lazy simultaneously.

At around 212,000 miles, I developed a 'tick' in the valve training of Yellow Mustang's 4.6 litre 3-valve V8. I traced this to a bad bearing in a roller rocker arm, so I changed all 24 rocker arms.

Here's what the inside of the engine looked like after 158,000 miles of 5,000 to 10,000 mile oil changes on Rheinol Primus 5/40.

View attachment 75384

Thursday, I visited a chum with a shop to use his hoist and change my oil.

My last oil change was on 09/04/2020 @ 235,000 miles using Rheinol Primus 5/40. As always, I use genuine Motorcraft oil filters exclusively.

View attachment 75379

My odometer is now showing 245,00, or just a shade over 10,000 miles on this oil change.

View attachment 75380

Here's the dipstick at 10,000 miles. Still clean enough the see through. No oil burned in 10,000 miles.

View attachment 75382

Continued in next post...
Thanks for the heads up on this product.
 
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