Jsavage3 Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 I have 130 Hrs SMOH and, after using mineral oil for break-in, I've been running Aeroshell 15W50 with Camguard. After much listening and researching, I am considering the idea of changing from the Aeroshell 15W50 with Camguard to Phillips X/C 20W50 and Camguard for the winter months and W100 SAE 50 with Camguard for summer. I am seeking opinions, considerations or personal experience for my proposed changing of the oil type used. Are there any negatives for going from brand X multi-grade to straight weight and then to brand Y multi-grade? Quote
jetdriven Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 I don't see an issue. Multigrade oil flows much better at colder temperatures and there is widespread belief that straight weight oil doesn't run off parts as fast after shutdown, which may protect the engine better. 1 Quote
aaronk25 Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 Great plan!!! Maybe when we can get rid of this Nasty leaded fuel we can all switch to a semi or fully syn oil, but for now I think you would be ahead. My flying club runs 5 planes made up of 172s, warriors and archers and for 15years they ran 15w-50 without a issue taking 10 engines to 2400 hours. But let's keep in mind the airplanes were flown every other day. Every cam made it, some just barley but they all did! With that we switched to Phillips this year, as it appears to be a better oil. My mooney runs camguard the club doesn't as we don't think we need it to make 2400 hours, and I haven't been able to convience the membership that running to 3000 hours is a good risk, despite using mike Busch ammo. . Quote
Rustler Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 Have run both with no problems. I run Phillips at this point, no Camguard because of the turbo. Ran Phillips + Camguard in my J and had no complaints. Quote
carusoam Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 Well Aaron, Oil does two things... (1) lubricate the engine (2) protect from rust (by keeping oxygen and moisture away) Problem with untreated oil is, it runs off the parts in a measured number of days or weeks. When the oil runs off, rust begins and lubrication is diminished. The club is keeping the engine coated and lubed by using it often. Would it help to keep the engine coated and lubed by using a different mechanism? Unlikely. I would suspect that the group is saying the planes never lose coating/lubrication because they get coated/lubed by being used. Spending more for special additives that don't work ANY better than untreated oil doesn't make financial sense. The Camguard doesn't change the lubrication(I hope), it changes how the oil stays on the metal for extended periods of time. Now, if the club planes don't fly for extended periods of time..., -a- Or... Oil runs off the parts much sooner than we expect, in hours. Now we're talking. How does Mike B. feel about that? Use Camgaurd, or never stop the engine for more than a few hours... Quote
OR75 Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 the 15W50 is a part synthetic while the 20W50 is mineral. these may have slightly different soot dissolving properties. I suggest you shorten your 1st oil drain after you switch, check filter and oil screen. Quote
aaronk25 Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 Well Aaron, Oil does two things... (1) lubricate the engine (2) protect from rust (by keeping oxygen and moisture away) Problem with untreated oil is, it runs off the parts in a measured number of days or weeks. When the oil runs off, rust begins and lubrication is diminished. The club is keeping the engine coated and lubed by using it often. Would it help to keep the engine coated and lubed by using a different mechanism? Unlikely. I would suspect that the group is saying the planes never lose coating/lubrication because they get coated/lubed by being used. Spending more for special additives that don't work ANY better than untreated oil doesn't make financial sense. The Camguard doesn't change the lubrication(I hope), it changes how the oil stays on the metal for extended periods of time. Now, if the club planes don't fly for extended periods of time..., -a- Or... Oil runs off the parts much sooner than we expect, in hours. Now we're talking. How does Mike B. feel about that? Use Camgaurd, or never stop the engine for more than a few hours... I emailed mike about this question early in the spring and he recommended using aeroshell 100 w plus in the summer and 20w50 aeroshell in the winter. He still liked the idea of running camguard regardless but after pushing him for a response as to the true value of it on a engine that gets the oil changed every 45 days or so he said you could probably get away without. The question was pointed at my mooney as I was flying the wings off it for work at that point. Seemed there was a sense he still wanted it in the crank case though..... Quote
wishboneash Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 I have 130 Hrs SMOH and, after using mineral oil for break-in, I've been running Aeroshell 15W50 with Camguard. After much listening and researching, I am considering the idea of changing from the Aeroshell 15W50 with Camguard to Phillips X/C 20W50 and Camguard for the winter months and W100 SAE 50 with Camguard for summer. I am seeking opinions, considerations or personal experience for my proposed changing of the oil type used. Are there any negatives for going from brand X multi-grade to straight weight and then to brand Y multi-grade? I am going to be doing the same thing this winter for my J. I haven't been using Camguard though with Aeroshell. Quote
Jsavage3 Posted November 25, 2013 Author Report Posted November 25, 2013 I agree that Camguard is magic, based on what I've heard, seen & read. My engine was OH'd at 1500-hrs (30 hrs after I bought the Mooney) due to corrosion. Upon teardown, we found the faces on the tappets for the camshaft were badly corroded...I mean very pitted! Four of the six camshaft lobes were badly rounded. Ever since then, as an owner who doesn't get to fly my Mooney as often as I'd like, I'm a firm believer in Camguard! Any feedback on AvBlend? Quote
jetdriven Posted November 25, 2013 Report Posted November 25, 2013 Snake mineral oil. Their claims that it soaks into metal is bogus 2 Quote
Shadrach Posted November 26, 2013 Report Posted November 26, 2013 I agree that Camguard is magic, based on what I've heard, seen & read. My engine was OH'd at 1500-hrs (30 hrs after I bought the Mooney) due to corrosion. Upon teardown, we found the faces on the tappets for the camshaft were badly corroded...I mean very pitted! Four of the six camshaft lobes were badly rounded. Ever since then, as an owner who doesn't get to fly my Mooney as often as I'd like, I'm a firm believer in Camguard! Any feedback on AvBlend? Many believers... but the world is full of false profits! Add blue dye to some straight weight oil and you'll have a home brewed version... MSDS below, but here are the "Cliff Notes" >99% mineral oil... http://www.avlab.com/v/vspfiles/templates/aviationlab/images/forms/avblend.pdf Quote
scottfromiowa Posted November 26, 2013 Report Posted November 26, 2013 That 1% must then be magic... 2 Quote
Earl Posted November 26, 2013 Report Posted November 26, 2013 I use Aeroshell 10W50 plus Camguard. Started using Camguard when I had a sticky valve that had to be reset at the annual and ever since then my compressions have remained good and no valve issues at all. Oil burn has also stabilized to one quart every 8-10 hours. Resolved by the Camguard? Maybe, maybe not. But for the relatively small incremental cost increase it seems worth it to me. I would say I have been considering switching to the 100W in the summer but had not considered the 20W50 for winter. Will ask my A&P about it next week. Quote
aaronk25 Posted November 26, 2013 Report Posted November 26, 2013 I'm a believer......this is my 1500 hour engine http://mooneyspace.com/gallery/image/34418-300-hours-on-engine-with-50w-and-camguard/ runing camguard. Look how clean!!!!!! 1 Quote
apriav Posted November 27, 2013 Report Posted November 27, 2013 At 130 hours use what you like it's not an issue. Quote
carusoam Posted November 27, 2013 Report Posted November 27, 2013 Nice picture Aaron! Bets regards, -a- Quote
wiseng Posted November 27, 2013 Report Posted November 27, 2013 I do the same. Phillips in Winter, Shell 50w in the summer both with camguard.. Quote
BigTex Posted November 27, 2013 Report Posted November 27, 2013 I do the same. Phillips in Winter, Shell 50w in the summer both with camguard.. Just curious, why wouldn't you just stay with X/C 20W50 year round? 1 Quote
wiseng Posted November 28, 2013 Report Posted November 28, 2013 I feel the 50W is better for me, but I do quite a bit of winter flying and use the 20-50 for the cold monthes. My oil consumption is about 20% less using the 50. Quote
ghovey Posted November 28, 2013 Report Posted November 28, 2013 Has anyone had any starter adaptor issues with the Camguard? Mine started slipping (i don't know if that is the correct word) about 50 hours after I started using Camguard. Probably coincidence. Quote
BigTex Posted November 28, 2013 Report Posted November 28, 2013 Has anyone had any starter adaptor issues with the Camguard? Mine started slipping (i don't know if that is the correct word) about 50 hours after I started using Camguard. Probably coincidence. Maybe I'm missing something or don't understand your question... Not sure I understand how Camguard has anything to do with starter issues? Quote
larryb Posted November 28, 2013 Report Posted November 28, 2013 I run multi weight year round. I don't see any reason to switch to straight weight in summer. You can still have cold mornings even in summer. 1 Quote
BigTex Posted November 28, 2013 Report Posted November 28, 2013 After setting through Ed's presentation and Mike Busch's presentations at Oshkosh, I'm pretty convinced the best combo is X/C 20W50 and Camguard. 1 Quote
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