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Greater Performance Over Extended
Life with Lower Costs
Verified by SAE Technical Papers:
881827, 881825, 95255 & Additional Scientific Studies
Lube oil contamination accounts for seventy to eighty percent of
all failures and wear problems. The wear process promoted by oil
contamination leads to diminished fuel efficiency, shorter useful
oil service life, increased engine down time, reduced component
life, loss of engine performance, and an overall increase in operating
costs.
Contaminant particles responsible for this damage are in the size
range of the dynamic lubricant films separating moving engine component
surfaces: 10 microns and smaller. Typically these particles pass
through the oil filter and continue to build up in the oil system.
By making simultaneous contact with opposing surfaces these harmful
particles focus the load onto a small area, degrading the surface
and perpetuating a chain-reaction-of-wear.
There are three categories of oil contaminates active in the engine
wear process:
1. Solid particles, including wear debris and soot, which damage
mechanical components and catalyze lubricant breakdown;
2. Liquid contaminates, including fuel and water, which corrode
metals and hinder the functioning of lubricants; and
3. Gaseous contaminants, including acidic combustion products, which
corrode component surfaces and degrade the oil.
The predominant harmful impurities in engine oil are metallic particles
and metal oxides.
Typically there are well over 10,000 contaminant particles per milliliter
of lube oil. Furthermore, approximately 90% of these particles are
less than 10-microns in size. It's important to note that these
particles generate about 3.5-times more wear than particles greater
than 10-microns in size. This wear occurs because these particles
are the size of, or slightly larger than the dynamic oil films separating
opposing surfaces.
Numerous studies have established a number of important points
regarding the relationship between lube oil contamination and engine
wear. In the following SAE Paper 881827 substituting a standard
20-30 micron filter with a 10-micron filter resulted in:
1. A reduced concentration of contaminant particles by a factor
of 10-15 times;
2. A reduction in the four major wear metals monitored;
3. The filter was capable of operating more than twice the recommended
service life; and
4. Permitted the lube oil service life to be more than doubled without
adverse engine wear or lubricant degradation.
In summary, controlling particle contamination in the 0-10-micron
size range retards the chain-reaction-of-wear, resulting in significant
reductions in component wear and lubricant breakdown. The beneficial
consequences include greater component life and reliability, increased
oil change intervals, increased fuel efficiency, and a reduction
in overall maintenance costs.

Diesel Component Wear Test DDA
6V-53T Engine
Performed by AC Delco Division of General Motors (GM)
Five critical component areas tested:
1. Upper & Lower rod bearings.
2. Slipper bushings.
3. Compression & oil piston rings.
4. Piston rings.
5. The main bearings.
Conclusion: Control of particles in the 3-10 micron range had the
greatest affect in reducing engine wear.
Diesel Engine Wear and Fuel Economy:
A study of twenty-two (22) 6-cylindar diesel engines performed
by Fodor & Ling
(affiliated with the Research Institute of Automotive Industry-Budapest
and the Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute)
It was found reducing contamination from 0.016% by weight (standard
oil filter) to 0.0025% with an extended filter, reduced engine wear
by a factor of 14. Most significantly, friction was reduced by 2.9%
when operating with clean oil. This fraction was equated to an increase
in fuel economy of up to 5%. As a comparison, this significantly
exceeds the 0.6 - 0.9% fuel economy gained experienced when converting
from SAE 40 to multi grade lube oil.
Survey of Diesel Engine Oil Contamination Levels
Samples of 138 engines operating with standard paper filter were
compared to 117 engines operating with upgraded 10-micron filters.
Based on the relationship between dynamic oil film and size of
wear generating particles, the most important particle size range
is 0-10 microns.
Conclusions:
1. Diesel engine lube oil contamination causes wear of engine components.
Wear of these components leads to loss of performance, increased
maintenance and overhaul cost, lower fuel efficiency, and shorter
lube oil service life.
2. There is a fundamental relationship between the size of contaminate
particles and the thickness of the dynamic oil films developed between
moving surfaces of active components. Particles the size of, or
larger than, the oil film thickness cause wear of components. By
making simultaneous contact with both surfaces, these particles
focus the load onto a small region of the surface, resulting in
surface pitting, plowing, and cutting.
3. The average oil film thickness associated with the majority of
diesel engine components is in the 10-micron size domain. This is
the size range of the most damaging contaminant particles. In addition,
mechanical stress is accentuated during the high-load/thinner oil
film phase of the engine cycle. In order to minimize engine wear,
emphasis must, therefore, be placed on controlling particles in
the 10-micron size domain.
4. Oil contamination causes component wear in return generates more
contamination. This is the chain-reaction-of-wear. If uncontrolled,
this process results in an enormous number of oil suspended particles.
The consequences of uncontrolled chain-reaction-of-wear are:
a) Higher friction, leading to high fuel consumption.
b) Loss of material from sliding and rolling contacts, resulting
in misalignment, vibration, and component replacement.
c) Opening of piston dynamic sealing surfaces, leading to loss of
compression, further fuel consumption, and contaminant ingestion
from the environment.
d) The accumulation of soot and combustion products in the lube
oil and the formation of lubricant breakdown varnishes and sludge
leading to reduced oil service life.
5. The significance of proliferating particles in the 10-micron
range domain is phenomenal. Each grain of contaminant (wear debris,
mineral grain, metallic oxide) produces a small but finite amount
of friction, abrasive wear, and catalytic oil breakdown. Because
of the vast number of harmful particles, the total effect of this
multitude is abbreviated oil life, substantially higher engine friction,
and propagation of engine wear
6. The benefits of controlling oil cleanliness levels in the order
of 100-1000 particles /ml are:
a) An 8 to 14 times reduction in engine wear.
e) Up to 2 times increase in oil service life.
f) Up to 2 times increase in filter service life.
g) Up to 5% improvement in fuel economy.
The ultimate benefits are greater diesel engine performance over
extended life with lower operating cost.
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