Well now I'm confused! I have used Shell Rotella T-4 oil in my 66 Corvette and other older flat tappet engines for many years just as many of you probably have also used it because if contains ZZDP needed for our older engines. I just finished reading an article that I saw from Motor Trend giving reason to not use this type of oil in a gasoline engine. I am posting this article to see if any of you would like to comment of it's information.
Shell Rotella oil
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
Interesting food for thought, Gary. There's so much contradictory information out there about using diesel oil in flat tappet engines.
I've used Mobil 1 15w-50 the past 15 years or so. It has 1,200 ppm P and 1,300 ppm Zn, and is formulated by a major oil company for flat tappet spark engines so I consider it a safe choice. Walmart sells it for less than $25 for 5 quarts so it's affordable too.Mark Edmondson
Dallas, Texas
Texas Chapter
1970 Coupe, Donnybrooke Green, Light Saddle LS5 M20 A31 C60 G81 N37 N40 UA6 U79
1993 Coupe, 40th Anniversary, 6-speed, PEG 1, FX3, CD, Bronze Top- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
Who wrote this article? What are his qualifications? Article mainly refers to "hot rod" and racing engines. In most instances this is different from our older collector Corvettes. I started using diesel oils in 1999 when I read an article in Car and Driver (Nov 1999 p 23 "Searching for the right motor oil for "keeper cars.", author Ed Kollin, former research chemist over engine test lab at EXXON) who recommended diesel oil for our flat tappet engines. One of his main points was that diesel oils will cling longer to the engine's parts which is important for cars that may not driven for several months, in addition to the value of ZDDP content.- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
Does Shell run Rotella ads in Motor Trend? Probably not. Do other "racing brand oil" products advertise in Motor Trend - probably. Ya gotta consider everything these days...... it is a cruel world out there.Ed- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
The article was written by Lake Speed Jr. Take a moment to check out who he works for - Joe Gibbs Racing for one and "Driven Racing Oil". Ya can't blame the guy for promoting his own product or those of the companies that is paying his salary but.........Ed- Top
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Duke Williams has posted on this MANY times and has advised that Rotella or any other "C" (CJ, CK) rated oil is absolutely fine for our cars. Until he says otherwise I will continue to use it or, as he has suggested, whatever the cheapest "C" oil I can find.
Jeff- Top
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Duke Williams has posted on this MANY times and has advised that Rotella or any other "C" (CJ, CK) rated oil is absolutely fine for our cars. Until he says otherwise I will continue to use it or, as he has suggested, whatever the cheapest "C" oil I can find.
Jeff- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
The current MINIMUM P level for S-category oil is 600 ppm and the max is 800.
I'm not aware of a minimum P concentration for C-category engine oil, but the current max for CK-4 is 1200 ppm.
Most major brands have spec sheets on the Web that list chemical composition including P. Some now have way less than the 1200 ppm max because they are incorporating new Boron-base additives, most of which are proprietary and patented.
Unfortunately none of the spec sheets that I know of list the B concentration, but the important thing to remember is that the C-category test suite has tougher anti-wear tests than S-category and ZDDP is not the only way to clear the hurdle.
Fromer NASCAR driver Lake Speed claims he is a "Certified Lubrication Expert", a title I'm not familiar with, but the fact that he is associated with an organization that markets "boutique" engine oil products to the vintage car community raises a little suspicion.
DukeLast edited by Duke W.; October 8, 2022, 02:35 PM.- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
Originally posted by Dave Perry (19643)The current API spec for CI engines is CK-4. There are numerous Multi Grade CK oils that are also spec SM for Spark Ignition engines.
The allowable maximum of Phosphorus for SM is 600 ppm. The minimum allowable Phosphorus for CK is 1000ppm. See the problem? Many of these dual-spec oils have Phosphorus in the 800 range. Not enough for older diesel engines, and too much for catalyst health in gassers.
There are CK-4 oils with no "SM" spec. Phosphorus is generally 1000ppm. So if you're purchasing multi-grade "Diesel Oil" look for CK-4 only. Not CK-4/SM.
I don't know where you guys come up with all this stuff. It's all explained in my oil article. Some of you need a refresher and if you've never read it...
DukeLast edited by Duke W.; October 8, 2022, 02:36 PM.- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
A strange, high viscosity. Original manuals recommeded 10w30 and maybe just 30 for extreme conditions.- Top
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Lake is from my state, MISSISSIPPI. He raced in NASCAR for a while back in the sixties but never had consistent success.- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
My basic recommendation is to buy an engine oil where the first listed category is a current or past (but not obsolete) C-category, currently CK-4.
BRAND MAKES NO DIFFERENCE!!!
I usually buy engine oil at Walmart and they usually stock the three national brand C-category products and their own SuperTech house brand C-category. I always buy the least expensive, which is usually the house brand, but very occasionally one of the national brands might be less expensive, so I buy that.
Is that so hard to understand?
Duke- Top
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Re: Shell Rotella oil
You guys are driving me nuts.
My basic recommendation is to buy an engine oil where the first listed category is a current or past (but not obsolete) C-category, currently CK-4.
BRAND MAKES NO DIFFERENCE!!!
I usually buy engine oil at Walmart and they usually stock the three national brand C-category products and their own SuperTech house brand C-category. I always buy the least expensive, which is usually the house brand, but very occasionally one of the national brands might be less expensive, so I buy that.
Is that so hard to understand?
Duke- Top
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