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Dirty Oil

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James Newton

11-26-2006 16:23:03




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I changed oil in my H today and found lots of sludge in bottom of oil filter housing. I think I will drop the pan. I am sure it is got a lot of sludge also. My question is there anything I can add to my oil when I refill that will clean my motor. I thought I might run it a couple hours then change it again. What you think?




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mowr

11-27-2006 09:07:30




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
The primary cause of sludge, as JayWalt referenced, is a cold running engine. The primary ingredient of sludge is almost always WATER. LOTS of water is produced as a normal byproduct of combustion. Water also collects in the oil as a result of normal condensation of water on the metal parts during periods of non-use. If you have the right thermostat (highest factory-recommended temperature) in good condition (not opening too soon or stuck open), then work the engine hard enough and long enough to cook the water out of the oil, and change it at reasonable intervals, your chances of building sludge are almost zero and your chances of getting rid of previously-formed sludge are almost 100%.

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Don L C

11-27-2006 07:52:31




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
Use a cheep 30w oil and 3 qts heating oil....leave filter out and run at fast idle for about 5 min..... ..no load on engine.....



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dhermesc

11-27-2006 06:48:27




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
If you are really concerned pull the valve cover and the side inspection plate and spray a couple cans of carb cleaner on the hole mess to get it clean. Then fill it with 5W40 Rotelle synthetic. It isn't a true synthetic but it has a high level of detergents and suspension chemicals. If you don't change you oil very often due to low running hours I'd stick with the Rotelle synthetic afterwards.

Sludge in tractors like these is usually the result of water (from condensation) mixing with the oil. "Synthetic oils" (and fake synthetic oil) are much more resistant to the formation of sludge from heat or water contamination.

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Randy as in Randy-IA

11-26-2006 17:57:02




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
When I got my '47 M I just took the pan off and cleaned leaves and twigs and all kinds of garbage out of it , I sprayed the lower end that I could reach with brake cleaner because it breaks down oil better than carb cleaner does and cleaned the oil pickup real well . I also sprayed out the oil fill neck real good with the pan off . I put it back together and put in a multi-weight diesel oil ( 15w-40 ) . It cleaned the engine slowly over the next couple of oil changes . Now when I change the filter I wonder why because it looks so clean . I still use the rotella oil in it . I didn't expect this and I can't verify that the top end is clean but the oil looks good when I drain it now . Your mileage may vary . Good luck ! ...Randy

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Don L C

11-27-2006 07:55:55




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Randy as in Randy-IA, 11-26-2006 17:57:02  
Shell 15 -40w Rotella will clean the engine like new.....



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Merlin

11-26-2006 17:49:29




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
I"m not trying to get anyone to do this, it"s just what I do. It is "my" preference, although I know a lot of other people that does it to different degrees. I have said before, the last time I changed oil in a vehicle that I wasn"t overhauling was Mother"s day 1963 in a 1957 Chevy. I have owned many brand new vehicles since then and have put over 200000 miles on each and every one of them. When I buy a new vehicle I go buy the cheapest .75 cent a quart oil I can find and drain the original oil out and put that in. I don"t raise the hood again until 30 to 40 thousand miles to check it. My 03 Impala hood was raised last week for the first time at 63000 miles and the oil is fine. My 1950 Super A has been changed twice and both times when I put new rings in it. I would rather wait and see if the engine goes bad and spend the money on a new engine rather than spending it in small amounts for oil changes. Yes, my Super A smokes, but the head has never been reworked either. It will be next spring when I restore it though. And it will get its 3rd oil change.

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James2

11-27-2006 07:54:16




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
If you ever have anything containing an engine for sale, and I'm foolish enough to try and buy it, please repeat this story and or your personal philosophy on changing oil. This will save me from a lot of heart burn.



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Allan In NE

11-27-2006 01:12:54




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
I hear ya,

There are lots and lots of things in this ol' world that just simply aren't so and the need to be changin' the oil every fifteen minutes is one those things.

It is amazing to me how the marketing media can lead people around by just tuggin' on their ear a little. :>)

Allan



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JayWalt

11-27-2006 06:27:18




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Allan In NE, 11-27-2006 01:12:54  
I'm not going to argue about this, at least I'm not trying to, but here's the thing. When you put new oil in your engine it is relatively clear. When you change it after 3,000miles, its generally nearly black. Why is that? Because its dirty with fine metal particles, with broken down oil, with all kinds of things. These need to be gotten rid of. Not only is it hard on the engine, but if you change your filter regularly, which you should regardless if you change the oil, you are only going to contaminate your new filter alot quicker. Now don't get me wrong, one thing I dont agree with is every 3,000 miles OR 3 months. 3 monmths? Why? What the difference if the oil is sitting in a bottle on a shelf for 2 years or in your engine. When its sitting there not exposed to heat or friction, nothing is going to happen to it.

While I agree that every 3,000 miles may be too short of a duration, one of the main causes of sludge is driving in town, 10 minute driving where your engine does not reach sufficient operating temperatures.

Seem awefully funny that nearly EVERYONE changes there oil regularly. From professionals, to certified mechanics, to engine engineers themselves...
Bottom line is there is no way that oil after 50,000 miles is as good as fresh oil, simply no way it is.
There has been times i've gone 5,000 between oil changes. I change my own oil and see what comes out of the pan, it just cant be good I'm telling ya.

Oh well, its fun having these discussion, after all its "discussion forums"

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JayWalt

11-26-2006 21:32:39




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
OH MY.
Dont you know that the heat alone causes the oil to breakdown into sludge. Not only does it make the engine dirty, it has less lubricating powers when its key components are broken down. Do what you will, but I'll never buy one of your cars. Oh my god...



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Merlin

11-27-2006 00:06:24




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to JayWalt, 11-26-2006 21:32:39  
Rest assured, I wouldn't sell you one that I use. I have sold many tractors over the past 40 odd years and each and every one has the correct oil at the correct level, and greased very well. If not, it was sold as a parts tractor. But one thing you say isn't quite right. You have to heat oil to approximately 700 + or - a few degrees in order to "break it down". You can use oil for 10 billion miles and it will be the same oil as when you bought it. It will be dirty, but the same oil with the same lubricating qualities.

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Roger46

11-26-2006 19:56:46




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
This kind of thinking just irritates me so much. I said to myself that I was not going to post a message, but I just have to. This sounds like my Father-in-law who used to drain the oil out of his car and put it in the tractor, because he said it was still good enough for the tractor. He always wondered why he had so much trouble with his tractors. I had a freind who had this same philosophy of not changing his oil in this car. At about 75,000 miles his hydraulic valve lifters stopped working. I helped him fix them and when we took the intake manifold off the V-8 engine we couldn't even find the lifters for the sludge. To quote my Dad, oil and grease is cheaper than metal. I also see there are a lot of theories out there for cleaning a sludge filled engine. If you add any detergent oil it will start cleaning the engine and can be bad as some have said. One thing I remember we did when detergent oil first came out and we had used nondetergent oil in our Oldsmobile engine, and that was start adding one quart of detergent oil with nondetergent and gradually work up to all detergent oil, changing the oil often. Roger

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Tom Windsor

11-26-2006 18:48:57




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
Oh my...what is the name of the magic oil that you are using? I need to buy some of that stuff that does not break down and fail to lubricate...



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City-Boy McCoy

11-26-2006 18:00:37




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Merlin, 11-26-2006 17:49:29  
Well, you may be right not to ever change your oil since you are getting 200,000 out of your engines, but I'll be darned if I'd go thirty to forty thousand miles before I'd even look at the level on the dipstick.
You can save a lot of money by not ever having a check-up at the doctor's office, too.
mike



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JayWalt

11-26-2006 19:55:52




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to City-Boy McCoy, 11-26-2006 18:00:37  
NO NO, I changed the oil every 3,000 miles, but I used valvoline, not penzoil. Do you think I'm that stupid? I also changed tranny fluid/filter every 25,000, Lube chassis every 3,000 and all them good maintenance thingies =)

Geez, give me little credit, will ya? =)



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City-Boy McCoy

11-28-2006 15:38:35




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to JayWalt, 11-26-2006 19:55:52  
Jay:
I was replying to Merlin, not you.
mike



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Tom Windsor

11-26-2006 17:37:05




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
I had this bright idea once with a S-10 pickup truck. I decided to clean the engine out. I drained it and put high detergent oil in there and took off to the NC mountains. About half way there, it just quit running. (I had not been looking at the gages...I was off floating around in outer space) The Engine would not turn over...locked up.

Well, I pulled the pan. The pickup for the oil pump was COMPLETELY clogged with sludge and it could not pick up the oil and starved it. The result is, I have been snake bit with this cleaning stuff. If I even thought about doing it any more, I think I would pull the valve covers and the pan and steam clean everything and then blow it out with air and still not be happy with it.

TW

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Ron in Nebr

11-26-2006 17:21:40




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
Dropping the pan to clean the sludge out of it is ok, but like Jay mentioned below, if you start adding things to "clean" the inside of your engine you're asking for trouble unless you're willing to pull the whole thing apart and clean everything completely. Breaking up that sludge that might have been there 40+ years and allowing it to circulate through the engine isn't good. If you're not having other oil-related problems, I'd be tempted to leave well enough alone.

When I was in school for auto mechanics one of our instructors told us about people who change to new brands of oil....won't name the brand, but it rhymes with "Tenzoil"....anyway, the story was that this brand of oil contained a detergent that would "clean" the inside of an engine. Supposedly when this was done the engine would self-destruct shortly afterwards due to the sludge that was broken loose clogging various passages and especially the pickup screen for the oil pump. He said that it's fine if a person wants to use that brand of oil if you start out using it when the engine's new, but it shouldn't be put in an engine that's spent it's whole life with other non-detergent brands.

Disclaimer- I've never experienced this, just what I was told by a knowledgable teacher.

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JayWalt

11-26-2006 17:30:22




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to Ron in Nebr, 11-26-2006 17:21:40  
My dad told me of the EXACT same thing. In fact, after he took his car to penzoil quick lube express, about 2 weeks later, his engine started leaking oil. It never did with 160,000 miles. So obviously some sludge was covering up tiny leaks in the gaskets, and the penzoil took care of that. I now own the car, and run Valvoline in it and it hasnt leaked for about 2 years with 245,000 miles. GCar runs great, gtting a little rough, but I need new plugs/wires for sure.

If I had a new car, I would run mobil 1, as its one of the cleanest oils out there..

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JayWalt

11-26-2006 17:16:07




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
Hmm... There's a good idea, trans fluid, that stuff has sooo many uses!!



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RustyFarmall

11-26-2006 17:09:28




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
Substitute one quart of Rislone for one quart of motor oil, or, substitute one quart of auto trans fluid for one quart of motor oil. Run it for several hours and then drain and change the filter. Some folks use the Rislone evry time they change oil and just leave it in until it is time for another oil change.



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dcw

11-26-2006 17:08:09




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
You have the right idea,I'd pull the pan and clean it out,clean out the filter,and pull the valve cover and physically clean the crud out.If you do this,you'll have most of it for the exception of the front cover.Put it back together,put good quality oil in it,work it and change the oil again.Thinning the oil with kerosene or diesel fuel isn't such a good idea,not only might you loosen and clog something,thin oil is hard on the bottom end.My 2 cents worth.

5 quarts of oil and a filter is cheaper then a set of bearings and turning a crank.

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JayWalt

11-26-2006 16:58:21




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to James Newton, 11-26-2006 16:23:03  
ALOT of people use 50% kerosene /deisel fuel mixed with 50% oil. There is of course variations to this. Here is the BAD news...

This is NOT a good idea at all. Doing this can break big sludge apart in the head and end up clogging the return ports for the oil to drain back into the oil pan. If you do decide to do something like this, be sure to pull the valve cover too and ensure that no big chunks are there to dislodge and block return ports. Also make sure you keep an eye on oil pressure.
As for how long to run the engine with the solution it it, well I dont know. I'd surmise that u want the engine warm when you drain and put this solution in, then run it for 5-10 minutes while its hot and then change oil. Idealy another oil change withing several hours would be advised as the first draining is not going to get rid of all of the kerosene, deisel. Dont foget after the flush to change the filter as well, as it will probably be pretty much toast and the oil pump screen will probably need cleaned as well..

On my 4.3l s-10 motor, I took the intake off, the oil pain, the valve covers and removed all the sludge I could by hand, then I used about 10 cans of carb cleaner to flush the sludge down into the oil pan and did the same to the bottom of the block, then I let it sit for a day to dry out, then I rfuilled it up and everything was good.

Take this advise as a guide, not instructions. I wont be liable for anything and use common sense. I'm sure others can also gie you better details about this procedure, as I have neveractually done it. The idea of running diluted oil in any engine just bothers me...

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Patrick Martin

11-26-2006 22:29:18




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 Re: Dirty Oil in reply to JayWalt, 11-26-2006 16:58:21  
Well I'l add my $0.02 if it's OK.....

I myself do recommend that you run a cleaner but only after you clean the pan and oil screen and ONLY about half a quart or a quart. Once that's done I'd drain it again and refill with fresh non-detergerent oil. Run again off and on for another week and drail and flush again. I just did this with a 100 that was FULL of grunge and all sorts of crap. I can't stand to have a dirty engine.

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