bertsmobile1
Lawn Royalty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2014
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Re: The Reason I think Synthetic Oil is Best for 4-Cycle Mower Engines. "Who Agrees?"
If you had the slightest understanding about oils Lubrication & engine design it would be abundantly clear that if an engine will run on conventional oil it has not been designed to utilise the full potential of synthetic oils.
The closest analogy is filling your old WWII side valve engine with 100 Octane racing fuel when it will happily run on 75 wartime pool petrol.
It will chug along on hi-test gas but it won't make 1 rpm more than it did on 75 and cost more to run.
It will require less downtime scraping carbon off the piston crown but it won't run any better.
Did Briggs say to run the synthetic for 2 or 3 times longer than conventional oils ?
IF not then what advantage are you gaining ?
The cooling of the engine is a function of the heat transfer surfaces and the R value at the interface between the hot metal & the cooling medium.
Oil is a poor conductor of heat so at best will transfer some heat from the hot head & cylinder down to the sump where the action of the flywheel & counter weight will actually increase the heat and because the sump is out of the cooling air flow and most times shielded by the bottom of the mower floor the rate of heat loss is very low.
Now unlike your NASCAR, the primary method of lubrication inside your mower engine is splash.
So while the NASCAR engine throws fairly clean oil out off the big end up into the cylinder, and all bearing run in cleaner filtered oil, your engine splashes the dirty oil sitting in the sump up the cylinder walls.
The bottom bush runs in the same dirty oil , along with any grit, carbon particles , acid combustion by-products and dust sucked inside.
On a lot of engines the upper bush also is splash lubricated and it is only the oil that is actually pressure fed into the big end that is filtered and that only happens on engines that actually have oil filters, which is not as many as you would think.
AFAIK the only mower engine with full pressure fed lubrication currently in production are the Kawakasi ones which is one reason why they are $ 500 + more expensive than the Kohlers.
Even then , there is no seal between the crankshaft and the sump so the lower bush still runs in the dirty sump oil
Now for some of the contractors who have no choice but to mow 25 deg or 100 deg and do 300 + hours a year, then there is an advantage which makes it worthwhile.
As for Joe Blow home owner it will not make the slightest bit of difference apart from making them think their manly protuberance is bigger than the bloke next door.
For many many many years I have been advising motorcycle owners that the best oil for their vintage engine is the stuff they just drained out at a shorter interval than recommended.
I run 100 year old engines on Gulf Western ( local blender ) 25w75 at $ 3.95/ litre ( ~ 1 quart) and I never have any oil related engine problems.
Because it is cheap I change it every time I use the motorcycle, just before I put it away.
Born again motorcyclists buy really expensive ( sometimes synthetic ) oil then expect it to last 20 years because they only ride it 200 miles a year.
I pass their pretty polished catalogue correct bikes on the break down trailers regularly.
Then there are the fools who try to run full synthetic only to find it will not make an effective seal between the rings & the psiston and because it is subdstantially slipperier than std oils actually prevents the piston rings bedded into the cylinder walls.
The post WW II motorcycles get SAE 30 mower oil which I buy for $ 2.45 / litre and same story, get home, drain the oil refill and the bike is ready for the next outing and I do about 30,000 miles on these bikes per year.
99.999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999% of the oil related problem that come into the workshop is because the owner has not checked the oil and there wasn't any.
Even then very few of them had fully cooked oil, some was a bit thick due to high concentrations of particulate matter, but not cooked.
Now if you really want to know, search the forum for "engine temperatures".
While not particularly good, nor done properly a list member did at least make a reasonable effort to plot engine temperatures over a variety of operating conditions & ambient temperatures.
These were all surface temperatures which will have to be extrapolated to get interiour temperatures but not too bad and from memory he did some oil sump temperatures as well.
Do this enough & you can make tables which are useful.
At temperatures above 250 deg F the alloy used in the cylinder head starts to soften which allows bolts to loosen and valve guides to slip so having an oil in there that is stable above this temperature is totally useless.
But as stated before.
If it makes you feel good, do it. It is your mower & your money
If you had the slightest understanding about oils Lubrication & engine design it would be abundantly clear that if an engine will run on conventional oil it has not been designed to utilise the full potential of synthetic oils.
The closest analogy is filling your old WWII side valve engine with 100 Octane racing fuel when it will happily run on 75 wartime pool petrol.
It will chug along on hi-test gas but it won't make 1 rpm more than it did on 75 and cost more to run.
It will require less downtime scraping carbon off the piston crown but it won't run any better.
Did Briggs say to run the synthetic for 2 or 3 times longer than conventional oils ?
IF not then what advantage are you gaining ?
The cooling of the engine is a function of the heat transfer surfaces and the R value at the interface between the hot metal & the cooling medium.
Oil is a poor conductor of heat so at best will transfer some heat from the hot head & cylinder down to the sump where the action of the flywheel & counter weight will actually increase the heat and because the sump is out of the cooling air flow and most times shielded by the bottom of the mower floor the rate of heat loss is very low.
Now unlike your NASCAR, the primary method of lubrication inside your mower engine is splash.
So while the NASCAR engine throws fairly clean oil out off the big end up into the cylinder, and all bearing run in cleaner filtered oil, your engine splashes the dirty oil sitting in the sump up the cylinder walls.
The bottom bush runs in the same dirty oil , along with any grit, carbon particles , acid combustion by-products and dust sucked inside.
On a lot of engines the upper bush also is splash lubricated and it is only the oil that is actually pressure fed into the big end that is filtered and that only happens on engines that actually have oil filters, which is not as many as you would think.
AFAIK the only mower engine with full pressure fed lubrication currently in production are the Kawakasi ones which is one reason why they are $ 500 + more expensive than the Kohlers.
Even then , there is no seal between the crankshaft and the sump so the lower bush still runs in the dirty sump oil
Now for some of the contractors who have no choice but to mow 25 deg or 100 deg and do 300 + hours a year, then there is an advantage which makes it worthwhile.
As for Joe Blow home owner it will not make the slightest bit of difference apart from making them think their manly protuberance is bigger than the bloke next door.
For many many many years I have been advising motorcycle owners that the best oil for their vintage engine is the stuff they just drained out at a shorter interval than recommended.
I run 100 year old engines on Gulf Western ( local blender ) 25w75 at $ 3.95/ litre ( ~ 1 quart) and I never have any oil related engine problems.
Because it is cheap I change it every time I use the motorcycle, just before I put it away.
Born again motorcyclists buy really expensive ( sometimes synthetic ) oil then expect it to last 20 years because they only ride it 200 miles a year.
I pass their pretty polished catalogue correct bikes on the break down trailers regularly.
Then there are the fools who try to run full synthetic only to find it will not make an effective seal between the rings & the psiston and because it is subdstantially slipperier than std oils actually prevents the piston rings bedded into the cylinder walls.
The post WW II motorcycles get SAE 30 mower oil which I buy for $ 2.45 / litre and same story, get home, drain the oil refill and the bike is ready for the next outing and I do about 30,000 miles on these bikes per year.
99.999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999% of the oil related problem that come into the workshop is because the owner has not checked the oil and there wasn't any.
Even then very few of them had fully cooked oil, some was a bit thick due to high concentrations of particulate matter, but not cooked.
Now if you really want to know, search the forum for "engine temperatures".
While not particularly good, nor done properly a list member did at least make a reasonable effort to plot engine temperatures over a variety of operating conditions & ambient temperatures.
These were all surface temperatures which will have to be extrapolated to get interiour temperatures but not too bad and from memory he did some oil sump temperatures as well.
Do this enough & you can make tables which are useful.
At temperatures above 250 deg F the alloy used in the cylinder head starts to soften which allows bolts to loosen and valve guides to slip so having an oil in there that is stable above this temperature is totally useless.
But as stated before.
If it makes you feel good, do it. It is your mower & your money