Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com
 
Vararam
Go Back   Camaro5 Chevy Camaro Forum / Camaro ZL1, SS and V6 Forums - Camaro5.com > Engine | Drivetrain | Powertrain Technical Discussions > Mechanical Maintenance: Break-in / Oil & Fluids / Servicing


Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 04-11-2010, 02:49 PM   #15
jehartley
 
jehartley's Avatar
 
Drives: Red LT1 & Silver LS3
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Maine
Posts: 221
Quote:
Originally Posted by mmbarberoilman View Post
Change it once a year or 35,000 miles with Amsoil 0W-30
Trolling...SPAM. Go away.
jehartley is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-13-2010, 12:03 AM   #16
duder4thgen
 
Drives: Bird
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: USA
Posts: 266
Little more in depth about GM's OLM, in short, I'd trust it.

Quote:
Re: GM Oil Life Monitor: Do you trust it?
From bbobynski on www.bobistheoilguy.com

One thing I can touch on and clear up.....the GM oil life monitor operation and my statement that ZDP (or ZDDP as you tend to call it here...most of the API literature just sticks to ZDP so I tend to use that) depletion is the basis for oil deterioration.

My spelling is poor but ZDP stands for zinc dialkyldithiophosphate which , as it sounds, is an anti-wear compound comprised of zinc and phosphorus.

ZDP is dispersed in the oil so as to be at a potential wear site if a surface asperity happens to break thru the oil film thickness causing the dreaded metal-to-metal contact. A molecule of ZDP must be present at that moment to prevent microwelding at the contact site which will cause material transfer, scuffing, scoring, wear and catostrophic failure. The concentration of ZDP in the oil will determine if there is ZDP present to work it's magic. The greater the concentration...the more likely a molecule of ZDP will be there...and vice versa.

By nature, ZDP is sacrifical. As ZDP is "used up" at a wear site to prevent micorwelding the concentration of ZDP decreases.... So...if you measure the ZDP concentration in engine oil in a running engine it will decrease at linear rate based on engine revolutions. Any given engine has a certain number of high potential wear areas where metal-to-metal contact could occur due to reduced film thickness and/or surface asperities....areas such as rubbing element cam followers, distributor gears, rocker arm pivots, push rod tips, etc...... The more of these areas the more ZDP depletion. The more often these features come in contact the greater the ZDP depletion. That is why, generally speaking, ZDP concentration in the oil, for any given engine, will decrease at a fairly linear rate when plotted versus cummulative engine revolutions. The more times it turns the more contact the more chance for wear the greater the depletion. This is as much of a fact as I could quote ever and is really not speculation or anything. It is proven beyond a shadow of a doubt in many studies. That is why it is ONE of the basis for determining oil life remaining and why it is THE basic premis of the GM oil life algorithm. It is only ONE of the things that determines oil life...but it is the one thing that can be tied to engine operation in a linear fashion and estimated very accurately by accumulating engine revolutions via a counter.

The GM engine oil life monitor counts engine revolutions and accumulates the number for the basis of the oil life calculation. It then adds deterioration factors for operating temperature, start up temperature, soak times, ambient, coolant temperature, etc... There are a LOT of factors that "adjust" or affect the slope of the deterioration but the fundamental deterioration is traced back to the ZDP depletion that is inescapable with engine revolutions. The specific rate of ZDP depletion is readily measurable for any given engine so that is the fundamental item that is first calibrated for the oil life algorithm to tailor it specifically to that engine.

You would obviously like to get the oil out of the engine before the ZDP concentration gets so low that it is ineffective at being at the right place at the right time and preventing engine wear so that becomes the long term limit on oil life for that application.

The other things that determine oil life such a acid build up, oxidation, petane insuluables such as silicon from dust/dirt, carbon or soot build up from the EGR in blowby, water contamination, fuel contamination, etc.... are all modeled by the multipliers or deterioration factors that "adjust" the immediate slope of the line defined by the engine revolution counter as those items can be modeled in other ways and accounted for in the immediate slope of the ZDP depletion line.

The algorithm was developed over the course of many years by several lubrication experts at GM Fuels and Lubes, spearheaded by Doctor Shirley Schwartz who holds the patents (with GM) for the algorithm and the oil life montitor. I had the luck of working directly with Dr. Schwartz when the idea of the oil life monitor first progressed from the theoretical/lab stage to real world testing/development/validation. There were fleets of cars operated under all conditions that deteriorate the oil life for any and every reason and , thru oil sampling and detailed analysis of the oil condition, the algorithm was developed, fine tuned and validated to be the most accurate way invented yet to recommend an oil change interval by. As just one example, I have seen cars driven side-by-side on trips, one towing a trailer and one not, for instance, to prove the effectiveness of the oil life monitor in deteriorating the oil at a faster rate just because of the higher load, higher average RPM, higher temps, etc...and it works flawlessly.

The oil life monitor is so effective because: it is customized for that specific vehicle/engine, it takes everything into account that deteriorates the oil, it is ALWAYS working so as to take into account THAT INDIVIDUALS driving schedule, and it tailors the oil change to that schedule and predicts, on an ongoing basis, the oil life remaining so that that specific individual can plan an oil change accordingly. No other system can do this that effectively.

One thing is that I know personally from years of testing and thousands of oil analysis that the oil life algorithm works. There is simply no argument to the contrary. If you don't believe me, fine, but, trust me, it works. It is accurate because it has been calibrated for each specific engine it is installed on and there is considerable testing and validation of the oil life monitor on that specific application. NOt something that oil companies or Amsoil do. They generalize....the oil life monitor is very specific for that application.

Oil condition sensors in some BMW and Mercedes products are useful, also. They have their limitations, though, as they can be blind to some contaminates and can, themselves, be contaminated by certain markers or constituents of certain engine oils. Oil condition sensors can only react to the specific oil at that moment and they add complexity, cost and another potential item to fail. One other beauty of the GM oil life monitor is that it is all software and does not add any mechanical complexity, mass, wiring or potential failure mechanism.

There is considerable safety factor in the GM oil life monitor. Typically, I would say, there is a 2:1 safety factor in the slope of the ZDP depletion curve....in other words, zero percent oil life per the ZDP depletion is not zero ZDP but twice the concentration of ZDP considered critical for THAT engine to operate under all conditions reliably with no wear. This is always a subject of discussion as to just how low do you want the ZDP to get before the oil is "worn out" if this is the deciding factor for oil life. We would tend to be on the conservative side. If the oil life is counting down on a slope that would recommend a 10K change interval then there is probably 20K oil life before the ZDP is catostrophically depleted....not that you would want to go there...but reason why many people are successful in running those change intervals.

Please...NOT ALL ENGINES ARE THE SAME. The example above is an excellent practical justification of why you would want to add EOS and change the 15W40 Delvac in the muscle car at 3000 miles max and yet can run the Northstar to 12500 easily on conventional oil. You must treat each engine and situation differently and what applies to one does not retroactively apply to others. This is where Amsoil falls short in my book by proposing long change intervals in most everything if you use their oil. It just doesn't work that way. You can run the Amsoil to 12500 with no concerns whatsoever in the late model Northstar because even the oil life monitor tells you that for conventional oil off the shelf. Would I do that to the 502 in my 66 Chevelle...NO WAY. Amsoil says I can though. Wrong.


There are entire SAE papers written on the GM oil life monitor and one could write a book on it so it is hard to touch on all aspects of it in a single post. Hopefully we hit the high spots. Realize that a GREAT deal of time, work and energy went into developing the oil life monitor and it has received acclaim from engineering organizations, petroleum organizations, environmental groups all across the board. It is not some widget invented in a week and tacked onto the car.

The oil life monitor is not under the control of a summer intern at GM Powertrain per an earlier post....LOL Not that a summer intern wasn't compiling calibrations or doing a project on it but is under control of the lube group with a variety of engineers directly responsible that have immediate responsibility for the different engine families and engine groups. The idea that a summer intern was responsible for or handling the oil life monitor is ludicrous.....LOL LOL LOL
Btw, when they mention 'muscle car' at they end, they are NOT referring to a 5th or even 4th generation Camaro. There is a world of difference between a Gen IV LS3 and the old carbed SBC they were referring to. Follow the Oil Life Moniter, it is the most personalized, accurate way to determine when an oil change is due without dropping $30-$40 on a UOA.
duder4thgen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-13-2010, 07:39 AM   #17
Mark H
 
Drives: 04 Denali
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: stockton ca
Posts: 390
It is still tough to break old habit of 3000-5000 miles
__________________

But Officer, I swear its just a vacuum leak.

Those red things? those are smog pumps!

2004 Sierra Denali ----- 2/4 drop
LSX 438 TWIN TURBO

LSX Block Video
Block number 00370. Build Date 04/17/2007
Mark H is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-14-2010, 01:38 AM   #18
joeaux
Kicker!
 
joeaux's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 2SS/RS & 2LT/RS
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Lakeland Florida
Posts: 64
I'm with you Mark. I was the same way. I've changed my oil every 3000 miles forever. Then I got two new Camaros. Couldn't believe this was possible. Oil life? Anyway, I researched the heck outta how this thing does what it does. Just have faith in it. It DOES work. My wife changed her oil when the car told her too. 8200 miles on the odo. Oil was actually still in pretty good shape even after those miles. I've got about 3000 on my 2SS right now. Changing the oil when the system tells me too. It's tough but I'm gonna do it. There are threads on here where guys are scared of the thing. It's like the snake oil and kinds of oil. Everyone has an opinion. But I figure GM knows what they're doing.
-joe-
__________________
joeaux is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-14-2010, 02:13 AM   #19
Mark H
 
Drives: 04 Denali
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: stockton ca
Posts: 390
The 2004 Denali in mi signature also had the oil life, but I obviously had it modded. I would change the oil as soon as the oil would stard to change color. Sometimes after 1500 miles. But I was also pushing 1000 rwhp
__________________

But Officer, I swear its just a vacuum leak.

Those red things? those are smog pumps!

2004 Sierra Denali ----- 2/4 drop
LSX 438 TWIN TURBO

LSX Block Video
Block number 00370. Build Date 04/17/2007
Mark H is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-15-2010, 12:57 PM   #20
JimE


 
JimE's Avatar
 
Drives: 2013 2SS/RS/1LE
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: St Louis, MO
Posts: 3,087
The system has been in use for awhile and it's backed by the factory warranty. I have the same system on my 2005 Silverado.
JimE is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-15-2010, 09:19 PM   #21
AZ5G
AZ5G
 
AZ5G's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 Transformer Ed. 1SS M6
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Arizona
Posts: 84
It's all about filtration. The Oil filter is the key when using synthetic oils. Personally, I used the Amsoil filter and change every 5k. It's cheap insurance and besides, when I got my first Camaro, there were no computers...DD
AZ5G is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-24-2010, 08:06 PM   #22
Court jester
 
Court jester's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 1LT CGM Camaro "Nomad"
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Varies - Portland, OR till Sept
Posts: 146
Wow. Sacred cow. Ripping apart an engine to get 50 more hp: no problem. Dismantling ones exhaust system: Meh, weekend project. Tuning a cars computer: three times on my way to work. Changing oil over 3,000 miles: Whoa buddy, that's crazy talk.
Court jester is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-24-2010, 09:18 PM   #23
GQ4Life


 
Drives: 2010 Camaro SS LS3
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Fishkill, NY
Posts: 5,197
Quote:
Originally Posted by Court jester View Post
Wow. Sacred cow. Ripping apart an engine to get 50 more hp: no problem. Dismantling ones exhaust system: Meh, weekend project. Tuning a cars computer: three times on my way to work. Changing oil over 3,000 miles: Whoa buddy, that's crazy talk.
for awhile now all the manufacters have been saying oil changes every 6,000 miles.
Though my last car I did every 3,000 still but that was because I love my car and I race it alot.
__________________
2015 Corvette Z06.. Lime Rock Park 1:01; Watkins Glen 2:14; Thompson Speedway 1:21
GQ4Life is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-24-2010, 10:20 PM   #24
Court jester
 
Court jester's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 1LT CGM Camaro "Nomad"
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Varies - Portland, OR till Sept
Posts: 146
Fair enough.
Court jester is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-25-2010, 12:13 AM   #25
GQ4Life


 
Drives: 2010 Camaro SS LS3
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Fishkill, NY
Posts: 5,197
I still couldnt make it to the on star oil change. it got to about 20% and I got oil change the week before I hit the drag strip. I was 8K miles.
__________________
2015 Corvette Z06.. Lime Rock Park 1:01; Watkins Glen 2:14; Thompson Speedway 1:21
GQ4Life is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-25-2010, 12:22 AM   #26
Mr. Wyndham
I used to be Dragoneye...
 
Mr. Wyndham's Avatar
 
Drives: 2018 ZL1 1LE
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Buffalo, NY
Posts: 31,873
Send a message via AIM to Mr. Wyndham
I like OLMS. As quoted above -- it's very detailed...very SPECIFIC...and very reliable.

The only thing more I'd like to know about it is if it can sense synthetic oils in an engine delivered with standard oil and alter the lifespan. hmmmmm
__________________
"Keep the faith." - Fbodfather
Mr. Wyndham is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-25-2010, 01:16 AM   #27
Sterling


 
Sterling's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 Camaro 1LT/RS M6
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Fairhaven, MA
Posts: 5,882
It looks like the warning comes on when it gets down to 5%.
Mine came on during the drive to C5 Fest and I got it changed in Savannah.
I originally changed it at 1500 miles and then waited until it told me to change it. I was somewhere around 12,000 when the warning came on.
Sterling is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-25-2010, 10:42 AM   #28
GQ4Life


 
Drives: 2010 Camaro SS LS3
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Fishkill, NY
Posts: 5,197
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dragoneye View Post
I like OLMS. As quoted above -- it's very detailed...very SPECIFIC...and very reliable.

The only thing more I'd like to know about it is if it can sense synthetic oils in an engine delivered with standard oil and alter the lifespan. hmmmmm
I thought they came with mobile 1 which is synthetic..
well my dealer puts mobil 1 in it now..
__________________
2015 Corvette Z06.. Lime Rock Park 1:01; Watkins Glen 2:14; Thompson Speedway 1:21
GQ4Life is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Oil Changes Dave McFly Off-topic Discussions 6 05-18-2010 05:50 PM
Oil change based on oil life monitor? trm0002 Mechanical Maintenance: Break-in / Oil & Fluids / Servicing 46 10-19-2009 01:19 PM
How about a barrel of oil for around $16? Blownhotrodder General Automotive + Other Cars Discussion 19 03-06-2009 08:25 PM
Huge offshore oil discovery KILLER74Z28 Off-topic Discussions 36 11-14-2007 07:14 PM
Major U.S. oil source is tapped KILLER74Z28 Off-topic Discussions 32 10-30-2007 10:47 AM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:19 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.