Well as most of you will know by my posts I've been using Millers oils since my cars 20,000 miles service. Since I bought the car (new 21 miles on the clock) I have been using Optimax and then V Power for every fill up.
My car is now at 92,000 miles and the last three services have been done after 6,000 miles with Millers Oil XF long life. This is quite expensive at £65 for 5 Litres but at least it is sold in 5L and not 4L like every other company (need 5L for a full fill, cheeky!!!)
Anyway since going on about Millers oils on here I discovered pretty quickly that we have a forum member that works for said company and quickly we got chatting about their products and services. During these conversations it came to light that Millers oils for £30 will analyse your used oil and give you a full run down of how it has performed and how your engine has performed and worn throughout this period.
I had planned to do this more recently but due to one thing or another I didn't manage to do this.
But the last time I changed my oil I got a sample.
What I did was when draining the oil out the sump plug I let it drain for a few seconds then took an in stream sample of about 200mls in a sample bottle (liberated for work, cheers)
This was packaged up and sent to Miller's oils for sampling. As they knew which oil it was I was using this allowed then to analyse this to see what extra 'stuff' was in the oil that wasn't there when it left the factory.
Initially:
This is the data for a unused sample of XF Longlife 5w/30 - because of the slight variation between different blends i've taken the following as a average:-
Viscosity @ 100C - 11.9cSt (Centistokes)
Density @ 15C - 0.8520gm/cm-3
Calcium Level - 0.140% wt/wt
Zinc Level - 0.076% wt/wt
(Calcium & Zinc are used as anti-wear/anti-oxidation etc)
....and obviously there are no metals/contaminants present in the unused oil as its a fully synthetic oil (none of the materials used in a fully sythetic come out of the ground, so its 100% clean.
Your used engine oil comes back with the following:-
Viscosity @ 100C - 11.8cSt (so very very tiny amount of molecule breakdown, very resistant to shearing)
Density @ 15C - 0.8620gm/cm-3, tells me your engine is very clean, and the used oil is even cleaner!
I was expecting, your used oil to be more black, but i didnt even have to spin it on the centrifuge to seperate the carbon deposits so I can do a infa-red scan. Very impressed with how clean it is, and it tells me your engine internals must be bloody clean!!
Calcium Level - 0.127% wt/wt
Zinc Level - 0.076% wt/wt
So the Calcium level has depleated by 0.013% and Zinc has not depleated at all so your engine was FULLY protected right upto you doing the oil change used engine oil sample, the additive pack will have been good for another 6,000miles plus in my opinion.
Here comes the important (and potentialy quite costly bit)
Wear Metals Analysis
Chromium - 1ppm
Lead - 3ppm
Nickel - 1ppm
Tin - 5ppm
Boron - 0ppm
Iron - 21ppm
Molybdenum - 2ppm
Silicon - 28ppm
Copper - 10ppm
All the above are represented in ppm (parts per million)
The wear metal data for your engine oil tells me:-
You can ignore all the elements that have 5ppm or less, this is likely to be what is known as 'background noise' because the levels its detecting are so low, 5 part per million is a ridiculas tiny amount (like compairing earth to the sun)
So the only wear you have is Iron & Copper. However these two figures for these two elements are well below average for 6,000 miles in a 200BHP engine.
I'll give you a comparrison; a suburu WRC that has done ONE weekend rallying will have about 30ppm Iron & 40ppm Copper wear.
My car is now at 92,000 miles and the last three services have been done after 6,000 miles with Millers Oil XF long life. This is quite expensive at £65 for 5 Litres but at least it is sold in 5L and not 4L like every other company (need 5L for a full fill, cheeky!!!)
Anyway since going on about Millers oils on here I discovered pretty quickly that we have a forum member that works for said company and quickly we got chatting about their products and services. During these conversations it came to light that Millers oils for £30 will analyse your used oil and give you a full run down of how it has performed and how your engine has performed and worn throughout this period.
I had planned to do this more recently but due to one thing or another I didn't manage to do this.
But the last time I changed my oil I got a sample.
What I did was when draining the oil out the sump plug I let it drain for a few seconds then took an in stream sample of about 200mls in a sample bottle (liberated for work, cheers)
This was packaged up and sent to Miller's oils for sampling. As they knew which oil it was I was using this allowed then to analyse this to see what extra 'stuff' was in the oil that wasn't there when it left the factory.
Initially:
This is the data for a unused sample of XF Longlife 5w/30 - because of the slight variation between different blends i've taken the following as a average:-
Viscosity @ 100C - 11.9cSt (Centistokes)
Density @ 15C - 0.8520gm/cm-3
Calcium Level - 0.140% wt/wt
Zinc Level - 0.076% wt/wt
(Calcium & Zinc are used as anti-wear/anti-oxidation etc)
....and obviously there are no metals/contaminants present in the unused oil as its a fully synthetic oil (none of the materials used in a fully sythetic come out of the ground, so its 100% clean.
Your used engine oil comes back with the following:-
Viscosity @ 100C - 11.8cSt (so very very tiny amount of molecule breakdown, very resistant to shearing)
Density @ 15C - 0.8620gm/cm-3, tells me your engine is very clean, and the used oil is even cleaner!
I was expecting, your used oil to be more black, but i didnt even have to spin it on the centrifuge to seperate the carbon deposits so I can do a infa-red scan. Very impressed with how clean it is, and it tells me your engine internals must be bloody clean!!
Calcium Level - 0.127% wt/wt
Zinc Level - 0.076% wt/wt
So the Calcium level has depleated by 0.013% and Zinc has not depleated at all so your engine was FULLY protected right upto you doing the oil change used engine oil sample, the additive pack will have been good for another 6,000miles plus in my opinion.
Here comes the important (and potentialy quite costly bit)
Wear Metals Analysis
Chromium - 1ppm
Lead - 3ppm
Nickel - 1ppm
Tin - 5ppm
Boron - 0ppm
Iron - 21ppm
Molybdenum - 2ppm
Silicon - 28ppm
Copper - 10ppm
All the above are represented in ppm (parts per million)
The wear metal data for your engine oil tells me:-
You can ignore all the elements that have 5ppm or less, this is likely to be what is known as 'background noise' because the levels its detecting are so low, 5 part per million is a ridiculas tiny amount (like compairing earth to the sun)
So the only wear you have is Iron & Copper. However these two figures for these two elements are well below average for 6,000 miles in a 200BHP engine.
I'll give you a comparrison; a suburu WRC that has done ONE weekend rallying will have about 30ppm Iron & 40ppm Copper wear.
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