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"Old" oil?

rv7guy2

Active Member
I am getting close to swapping out the summer weight oil for cold weather oil in my IO-360 powered RV-7. I am currently running Shell W100 Plus and will be shortly switching to Shell W80+. for cold weather operations. (Ambient air temp below 10C, or 50F). I recently came into possession of two cases of Shell W80 that are dated "30May19." Is this oil still useable or is it time expired? Some local pilots have opinions both ways..some say use it, some say don't because it's 6 years beyond the stamped date.
What are your thoughts?
 
Try this prior discussion

 
For what it's worth I asked a similar question of the CamGuard rep at Oshkosh. He told me putting an expiration date on their product was mandated by the FAA. He said it was not tied to a shelf life or performance of their product.
 
How long was this oil underground awaiting discovery, drilling and pumping?
Not the oil that’s the issue. It is all the additives and if they breakdown or stay in solution. Those additives are made in a chemical lab and not natural forming in Mother Earth.
 
That's a joke...right?
Why is that a joke? These oils have only the ad additive, nothing else (excluding the plus and victory stuff with the synthetic additives). The mineral oil base stocks are pretty much how they came out of the ground. Only real refining involved is separating the crude into various different weights/ aromatics. If it sat in the ground for 100’s of millions of years without degradation, what has changed? The bottle is sealed, so it can’t oxidize. What else is left to degrade the oil and make it unfit that wasn’t occurring for the last million years.

A lot of this expiration nonsense is just lawyers and marketing folks weighing in. Saw a bottle of my wifes eye drops. Ingredients listed as water and salt. Expiration date was two years out. I laughed and asked here to call someone and find out when the oceans are going to expire. Come on, saltwater expires???

Sure, there is plastic leaching into the fluidsover time, but that is limited to what we put in or on our bodies. Will have no effect on engine oil.
 
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Not the oil that’s the issue. It is all the additives and if they breakdown or stay in solution. Those additives are made in a chemical lab and not natural forming in Mother Earth.
The only additive used in most aviation oils is ashless dispersent. The most common is PIBSI. It is considered very robust and highly stable and It fully mixes with oil and never falls out os suspension. While not a chemist, i have significant doubts that this will cause the oil to degrade, though in fairness, i do not know how long that additive will last before becoming ineffective. The fact that chemists consider it highly stable makes me think it is long lasting. If you are talking auto oils, that is a whole different matter, as they use a host of synthetic additives to meet their requirements.
 
Why is that a joke? These oils have only the ad additive, nothing else (excluding the plus and victory stuff with the synthetic additives). The mineral oil base stocks are pretty much how they came out of the ground. Only real refining involved is separating the crude into various different weights/ aromatics. If it sat in the ground for 100’s of millions of years without degradation, what has changed? The bottle is sealed, so it can’t oxidize. What else is left to degrade the oil and make it unfit that wasn’t occurring for the last million years.

A lot of this expiration nonsense is just lawyers and marketing folks weighing in. Saw a bottle of my wifes eye drops. Ingredients listed as water and salt. Expiration date was two years out. I laughed and asked here to call someone and find out when the oceans are going to expire. Come on, saltwater expires???

Sure, there is plastic leaching into the fluidsover time, but that is limited to what we put in or on our bodies. Will have no effect on engine oil.
Ahhhh no…our engine oils, sans additive, is not how crude oil comes out of the ground. Yes crude oil and engine oil have the word oil in them but crude comes out of the ground looking and acting nothing like engine oil. The crude oil is put through a process where the feed stock is separated into many products and engine oil ends up being just one of them. And it’s not just separation, it a chemical change to the molecules.
The lightest crudes can resemble gasoline and the heaviest crudes can resemble asphalt but none of them resemble engine oil until the refinery has done its job.
 
Ahhhh no…our engine oils, sans additive, is not how crude oil comes out of the ground. Yes crude oil and engine oil have the word oil in them but crude comes out of the ground looking and acting nothing like engine oil. The crude oil is put through a process where the feed stock is separated into many products and engine oil ends up being just one of them. And it’s not just separation, it a chemical change to the molecules.
The lightest crudes can resemble gasoline and the heaviest crudes can resemble asphalt but none of them resemble engine oil until the refinery has done its job.
I never said engine oil was the same as crude oil, only that it is separated out from crude oil, which is very old and therefore very stable. I don’t believe There are radical molecular changes going on in that process. Clearly there is some, as we start with one molecular structure (crude) and end up with many derivatives, but that doesn’t necessarily change the stability of the end product. We take salt water from the ocean, refine it to separate the water and the salt, a molecular change, and both of the separated products are just as stable as the source.

I am not a chemist, so clearly don't have the answers. I just don't accept it just because Philips wrote it on the bottle. we can agree to disagree on this.
 
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