THE END OF STRAIGHT GRADE ENGINE OIL?(PART 1)

DF Sales&Marketing

Oil Tech Moderator
in part from lubes ’ n greases magazine

Going back to a now well-worn and crumpled report on 1980 lubricant sales from the national petrochemical & refiners association, I see that straight grades (such as sae 20 and sae 30) accounted for about 52 percent of u.s. Engine oil sales. By 1990, the volume had dropped to around 28 percent and by 2000 it was 11 percent. In the final year for which npra published comprehensive volume data (2006), their share had dropped to almost 4 percent. In all years, total engine oil sales volume was on the order of 1 billion gallons per year.
During December’s astm committee d2 in anaheim, calif., the American petroleum institute’s heavy-duty engine oil categories that currently support straight grade engine oils were declared to be obsolete. Effective at the end of 2009, api categories cf-2 and cg-4 are gone. Api cf-4 already had been dropped in June 2008. These categories, all introduced in the first half of the 1990’s, died because the engines used to test for compliance are no longer available.
A post-mortem exam of straight grades might begin with the question, what happened? What factors drove the steady change from mono-grades to multi-grades, and what impact will this have on future sales of engine oil and related products?

why they’re dying
Single-grade engine oils were the only game in town until the mid-1950’s, when the first viscosity index improved engine oils appeared. V.I. Improvers were probably novelties when they debuted, but as time went on, it became apparent that multigrade engine oils offered some benefits that were not available in straight grades. For one thing, it wasn’t necessary to change oil grades for winter or summer service. They were a great sales tool, and gave oil marketers a chance to potentially improve margins.
Gradually, the auto manufacturers began to move to multigrade recommendations for their engines to gain the advantages of cold-start capability. GM owners manuals last referenced straight grade engine oils in 1983—and then only for use in “warm” temperatures. With the energy crisis and air quality standards which came in the ‘70s, lower-viscosity engine oils became more important.
One technology that virtually demanded multi-viscosity engine oils was the four-cylinder engine. Since there is only one ignition stroke for each crankshaft revolution, starting and maintaining the start became a real issue. The starter could easily turn the engine fast enough to get it to start but, if the oil was too thick (read “straight grade”) the engine would immediately stall. The simple solution was to use multi-vis engine oils, which flowed well at both higher and lower temperatures. Since then, the push has been to lower and lower viscosity.
On the heavy-duty side, the change was slower in coming. The straight-grade market remained strong for a number of years, primarily supported by detroit diesel’s two-cycle engine market. In fact, it wasn’t until dd introduced its first four cycle engine series that it even recommended multigrade engine oils. There was some validity in this position, especially for the company’s large displacement engines. I have seen power curves generated on 16v-149 detroit diesel engines that clearly showed a loss in power at higher output when multi-grade engine oils were used.
However, the major over the road engine manufacturers all saw the advantages of multigrade engine oils. One of the clearest benefits to be identified was reduced oil consumption with multi-grades.
On the face of it, that seems illogical (you’d expect heavier oils to stay put) but it is true. Multigrades form a thinner—but still adequate—oil film on cylinder liner walls, so when the piston moves up in its travel, there is less oil to push into the combustion chamber to be consumed.
There’s another problem with straight-grade engine oils in heavy-duty applications: they tend to form more deposits than do multigrades. This is probably due to the use of higher-vis base stock cuts in straight grades.
Of course, the question of emissions also comes into play for the heavy-duty engine oems. Progressively more stringent emissions requirements make control of oil consumption critical since that is the most common oil-related contribution to emissions. Volatility is important, too, but the fact of reduced consumption due to oil film thickness is a critically important part of the equation.

fallout for other products
So now we are down to 4 percent or less of u.s. Automotive engine oil sales being straight grades. Some product applications that May still depend on these oils are certain transmission fluids, hydraulic oils, gear oils and general purpose lubricants. Each of these applications, if they haven’t already, will need to find replacement products and specifications to cover their former use of straight-grade engine oils, once they are finally obsolete.
Groups that write standards for gear oil and transmission fluid, for example, will have to review their existing standards to see if these orphaned applications can be covered by other specifications. Hydraulic fluids are already covered with proper viscosity grades. For general purpose products, users will have to search the product lines to find suitable substitutes.

(please continue to part 2)
 
Interesting about the saying power of a multi grade oil vs single grade.

Story:
1976 cessna turbo 210 born and raised on straight 50wt aero shell. Heard all of the hype about the new 15-50 that was released so thought why not.. So we switched and watched the soap testing results for wear indicators... Note that the plane is subject to sitting for relatively long periods in a humid hanger especially during the winter months..

Well the iron, nickel, chrome, and brass all immediately increased. But cutting the oil filter open showed no metal or obvious specs

so we decided to run the newly changed oil and put some hard hours (25) on it in a short time frame while staying close to the local airports. The next soap showed the original normal base line trend with no high iron nickel etc. Scratching my head we decided to leave it alone and it went back into its regular hibernate and run interval..


During the next oil change it went into its annual inspection and during a compression test one cylinder fell below the min leak down of 60/80 and so I pulled the three jugs on that side. Why all three? If you have ever pulled down a tsio520h outa a turbo 210 you'll know that it takes a good 8-10 hours to get the exhaust and intake apart from one side and the valves are easy to fix. So doing the three is an easy decision...

Well with the jugs off I was looking around it the crankcase for anything funny and noticed the cam and crank iron surfaces had fine surface corrosion on them and appeared to be pretty dry of oil.. The cylinders were the same on the oily side.

After asking around about the new multi grades we found that if you don't run the engine at leased 2 times per month, don't use it. Stick with the 50wt as it thickens up more cold and stays around promoting better corrosion protection... Made sense to me so back we went to the 50wt and never had another soap annomoly...


Single grade 40 wt is still recommended by crusader marine on all of their inboards. I still use straight 50 on blown street engines and our race car gets 60 wt.

I did enjoy your write up but guess I am out of the mainstream when oil is in question.
 
Hi Robert,

nice to hear from you again!

I noticed you replied to "part 1", so I hope you read the entire article which finished on "part 2" as well.

The applications you mentioned are not your "normal" day to day, automotive, or even historic automotive types, such as what the article in question was specific to. In the applications you mentioned, straight weights would be the way to go, and you obviously proved that with the aero shell and the drag cars. (although I know people running in the super comp class that use multi-grade without any problems)

usually, single grade is recommended mostly for engines which run at relatively even rpms, your examples, and others such as stationary engines (as in agriculture)..... There are many applications. The gist of the article is the fact that for automotive use, the single grade engine oils only make up 4% of the sales for that category, and the oil manufacturers are really taking a second look at continuing keeping the production on them.
 
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