A
Look at Motor Oil Basics
Modern
day oils are complex, chemically engineered compounds that have improved
upon refined crude oil. Modern oils are designed and chemically
manufactured to achieve specific traits and properties necessary for use
in current automobiles. But many of the basics of lubricants and
lubrication are as important today as they were fifty years ago.
To
begin with, motor oils must perform some of the same basic functions today
as they did years ago. All of these functions are considered when
designing any motor oil, whether it will be a synthetic or mineral-based
oil.
Permit
Easy Starting - Any motor oil must permit easy engine starting. Viscosity,
a measure of an oil’s resistance to flow, is taken into consideration
when questioning, whether or not an oil will permit easy starting. An
oil’s ability to flow efficiently throughout an engine will be affected air
temperature. Therefore, an oil formulated for winter driving must have a
low enough pour point for it to flow to all parts of an engine quickly
when started, but also to provide adequate protection once the enginereaches
normal operating temperatures.
Lubricate
and Prevent Wear - Motor oils must also lubricate and prevent
wear. This can be more of a challenge in temperature extremes. Oil that
does not flow well in cold temperatures will leave parts of the engine
with no protection, and oil that burns off and becomes too fluid will
leave little protection in high temperatures. The goal of an oil is to
provide constant full-film lubrication to an engine’s components. This
type of lubrication occurs when the moving surfaces are continuously
separated
by a film of oil. Crankshaft bearings as well as connecting rods,
cam-shafts and piston rings normally operate with full-film lubrication.
Boundary lubrication occurs when it is impossible to maintain a continuous
oil film between moving parts and intermittent metal-to-metal contact
results. Additives can greatly reduce the amount of damage that can occur
during boundary lubrication. Boundary lubrication conditions always exist
during engine starting and often during the operation of a new or rebuilt
engine.
Reduce
Friction - Motor
oils must reduce friction. Automobile manufacturers recommend oils based
on SAE grades according to expected atmospheric conditions. This helps to
ensure adequate but not excessive viscosity at normal operating
temperatures. Excessive viscosity can make an engine work harder at moving
the oil and therefore lose some of its efficiency and create more heat.
Prevent
Rust and Corrosion - Motor oils must also prevent rust and
corrosion. Unburned fuel and soot can mix with water to form sludge and
varnish deposits on critical engine parts. Sludge buildup may clog oil
passages, which reduces oil flow. Varnish buildup interferes with proper
clearances, restricts oil flow and causes vital engine parts to stick and
malfunction. The life of an engine
depends on an oil’s ability to neutralize the effects of these corrosive
substances.
Keep
Engines Clean - Another
important feature of any motor oil related to preventing rust and
corrosion is the necessity of keeping engine components clean. Sludge and
varnish can be controlled with the proper additives and can be filtered
out of vital engine components. In performing its lubrication function,
some oil must reach the area of the top piston ring in order to lubricate
the rings and cylinder walls. This oil is then exposed to the heat and the
flame of burning fuel, and part of it actually burns off. Modern oils have
been chemically engineered to burn as cleanly as possible in order to
minimize the harmful deposits left on the walls of the combustion
chambers. These build-ups can cause ring sticking and breakage, pinging,
engine knock or other combustion irregularities that reduce the efficiency
and economy of the engine.
Cool
Vital Components - Engine oil also acts as a coolant. In fact, the
water-antifreeze mixture used in an automobile’s cooling system only
does about 60 percent of the cooling job. And it usually only cools the
upper portions of the engine – the cylinder heads, cylinder walls and
the valves. As much as 5 to 10 percent of engine heat comes from friction
produced by closely fitted engine parts
such as connecting rods, main bearings, camshafts and piston rings. The
crankshaft, the main and connecting rod bearings, the camshaft and its
bearings, the timing gears, the pistons and many other components in the
lower engine rely on oil to carry the heat load away.
Seal
- The
surfaces of the piston rings, ring grooves and cylinder walls are not
completely smooth. They feature microscopic hills and valleys that can
reduce engine efficiency by allowing combustion pressure to escape into
the low pressure area of the crankcase. Motor oils must fill in these
hills and valleys on ring surfaces and cylinder walls, allowing maximum
combustion pressure.
Prevent
Foaming - Anti-foam
additives in modern oils prevent foaming of motor oil due to air in the
crankcase being whipped into the oil. Foamed oil contains air bubbles that
may or may not readily collapse. Foam present in motor oil inhibits heat
transfer and impedes lubrication due to the high compressibility of air.
In order to allow an engine to run efficiently, motor oil must be
nonfoaming.
Increase
Fuel Economy - A final function of a motor oil is in increasing fuel
economy. Various additives such as friction modifiers can allow engines to
operate at increased levels of efficiency, resulting in better fuel
economy for vehicles. All of these functions, to some extent, can be
performed
by both mineral and synthetic oils. However, synthetic oils do not contain
many of the impurities that mineral oils can, and this allows synthetics
to perform at higher levels in all categories. AMSOIL has long recognized
the benefits that a synthetic oil can offer over a mineral oil. Synthetic
fluids exhibit higher tolerances and greater lubricating properties in
every aspect of automotive operation. And AMSOIL motor oils contain the
finest additive packages to insure that a vehicle can receive the finest
in protection and operate at a high level of efficiency.
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