I just smear motor oil on them. Been doing it for 10 years with zero problems. Seem like guys are over complicating this lol
I just smear motor oil on them. Been doing it for 10 years with zero problems. Seem like guys are over complicating this lol
This is why I hate posting on forums... Somehow the group think is powerful enough to overshadow facts.
Yes Vaseline is pure petroleum jelly, but a lot of manufacturers have other ingredients as well. If you get pure petroleum jelly it's fine.
As for my original point I wasn't saying it will "clog" the injectors. The FACT is that Diesel engines were originally designed to run on anything that will spray from the injectors and burn at the conditions inside the cylinders. They were a huge benefit back in the first days of automobiles where gas quality could vary wildly from one location to another, and they obviously have huge military benefits as you can just burn fuel from wherever you are. The problem isn't that your diesel can't inject used oil successfully or that it won't run on used oil, the problem is in the chemistry of what happens inside your cylinders. Modern oils, especially those like HDEOs and gear lubes that have longer use able life cycles contain additives like sulfated ash which DO NOT COMBUST and instead react with other combustion by products. If those molecules do not burn into a neat clean water vapor and flow out of the exhaust, where do they go? The answer is that some of the molecules stick around and coke up your whole upper cylinder area to include valves and the injector tips where they're actually exposed in the cylinder. Obviously the concentration of these additives vary with different oils. Anyone wonder why we have CJ-4 oils now when the CI-4+ oils seemed better? CJ-4 reformulation restricted the allowable content of ash and other non combustible additives because the little insignificant amount that sneaks past your piston rings or in through your wearing turbo bearings and burns in your cylinders releases enough non combustible by products to plug a DPF up fast enough that everyone would end up having them replaced under warranty. They reformulated oil for weaker additive packages and shorter life spans to ensure everything reaching the cylinder is burnable. These are FACTS.
Does oil inject and burn in a diesel? Yes. It actually lubricates the injection pump and injectors better on the way in too. Does that mean it's a good idea? Not on any engine you want to last forever.
I burn a little oil in an old 6.2 that I wish would die so I could justify a swap, I don't put it in my $3,000 per injector set modern super diesel engineered for ULSD.
Try burning some clean motor oil sometime and see what's left behind.