bertsmobile1
Lawn Royalty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2014
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All true sort of but that does not change the fact that zinc is not needed for mower engines because the scuffing forces are just not thereThat is not quite correct. Compared to liquid-cooled automobile engines, small engines run hotter, operate under constant load, generate more oil-damaging contaminants, suffer from neglected maintenance, and are exposed to dirt, rain, and other extremes. Simply put, they are tougher on oil than most people think. Automobile oils are designed with fuel economy in mind, not durability.
I can compress a B & S valve spring a small amount between my finger & thumb
I can not do that on my BSA engine , and it has 2 valve springs per valve and when new used plain oil with no zinc
The zinc thing is another case where the advertisers use the tiny bit of knowledge that most have about oil to confuse the issue to convince you to buy a product that you do not need .
IT is the Alaskan Elephant Repellant approach .
The most important thing with mower oils is the corrosion inhibitors because the engines sit around for so long
Next most important is the detergents to prevent the contaminants forming a sludge paste in the sump while it is sitting doing nothing .
Zinc was not important in any engines other than diesels till the 90's when start up emissions became law and oils had to be made way too thin so there was almost no viscous drag on the engine allowing the very first piston to do a full cycle to fire .
Mower engines are very very very very very very very low tech and very lightly strained .
The fact that they use cast con rods running directly on the big end journal should be enough for most .
But if you want some more convincing then look at the torque : cc ratio of a mower engine compared to an equivalent HP or capacity air cooled motorcycle engine.
That will show just how lazy these engines are
As for subject to misuse & abuse , yes 100% on the money there .
And this is the biggest reason why I try to get my customers to use plain mower oil & not the very expensive synthetic oil so they will change it every season on the final mow of the season .
I play with vintage motorcycles & when synthetics came out there was a rash of engine failures with bikes where the owners had switched to synthetics
Now there is nothing wrong with the oil as such but the oil holes, galleries and wells are designed for older higher viscosity oils so things like cams never got enough oil ( fixed by going up an index or two ) but the main problem was leaving it in there for way too long because the recommended oil change intervals on the bottle were 4 times longer than the engine was designed for .