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Re: alfa-digest V9 #310



Interesting, but I must tell you that my research* indicates otherwise. If your car was designed to use multi-grade oil, then any multi-grade of the correct viscosity, including synthetic and semi-synthetic will work fine and will NOT damage seals and gaskets. The problem is that cars designed to use single-weight detergent oils (mostly built before the mid/late 1960's - depending on make) will have their seals compromised by any modern multi-weight oil, whether it be synthetic, semi-synthetic or pure mineral oil. Modern oils have aggressive additive packages, with strong detergents and dispersants. These are designed to keep all impurities in suspension so that they will end up in the oil filter, not in the engine. Older cars, with their single-grade oils depended on deposits around the gaskets and seals to make them oil-tight because the tolerances weren't that tight in days before CNC machining. An aggressive additive package will dissolve these deposits and the seals will leak. Also modern oil viscosity such as that found in synthetics is simply too thin to work in classic car engines. Oil suitable for a Milano Verde or a 164 will be problematical for the oil pump and bearings of a Giulietta. Owners of older Alfas like Giulias, Giuliettas, 2600s, and 2000s/1900s should use a modern single-weight mineral oil designed for "classics." These oils are formulated with less aggressive detergents and dispersants, but augment them with modern rust inhibitors, dry lubrication anti-wear agents such as molybdenum - which help with cold weather starting as well as viscosity index modifiers which keep the oil from thinning out to quickly as the engine heats-up.

*I just finished doing research for an article on oil to appear in the April "Overheard Cams" and these are some of the things I learned from such sources as Castrol, Red Line, and Valvoline.

George Graves
'86 GTV-6



On Monday, March 3, 2003, at 11:19 PM, alfa-digest wrote:



Date: Mon, 3 Mar 2003 23:34:38 EST
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: alfa-digest V9 #308

Hey Gang,
I've been reading about all the horror stories concerning oil leaks when
switching to synthetic oils. Please lets get something straight! Synthetic
motor oil DOES NOT CAUSE LEAKS, nor does it attack and/or degrade gaskets and
seals! Improperly installed, poor quality or worn out seals and gaskets leak.
Synthetic oil is very high detergent... If there were a small leak in an
engine eventually some of the solid contaminants carried in suspension in the
oil would find its way to the leak and become deposited. Enough deposits my
eventually seal the leak. This is how products like radiator stop leak
actually work. Anyway, now the owner fills the crankcase with synthetic oil
and the high detergent capacity washes away the crud and presto! We have
leaks... Well, actually you always had leaks before, now you just know where
they are... I refreshed a 1957 Giulietta engine using many NOS gaskets and
seals. I have run the engine several weeks on Mobil 1, the garage floor under
the car is clean...
If you intend on using synthetic oil it would be nice to do it early in the
life of the engine but I believe the wear saved by synthetic oil will more
than offset the cost of an engine gasket set, a tube of gasket sealer and a
weekend spent tinkering.
Thomas Gonnella
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