dfndr
Well-known member
I found a case of motoroil in the back of my shed. I guess it is 8 to 10 years old. Any reason not to use it?

That old oil is the premium stuff. It has the zinc necessary to lubricate the lifters on older flat tappet cams made up until recently. Lots of people who own old muscle cars would pay extra for oil of that quality today.
Check out the API code rating on the top of the can or on the bottle label. Check that rating against the requirement for any car you are thinking of using it in. The required rating will be in the owner's manual, or you can usually find it on-line.
I'd sell it. It might not have the additives that some people think it would have. Back in the mid to late '70's Ford Pintos and some GM cars had problems with the cams going flat. Ford blamed the problem on the lack of anti-wear additives in the oil. Of course, Ford always blames their problems on everybody other than themselves so maybe it really was just junk cams, but I wouldn't take the chance.
YES we are VERY serious...Are you guys serious? Oil made in 1999 is completely inferior to oil made in 2009?
Motorcycles are another place the older oils can be used.
Ouch... Some bikes are High Tech![]()
I use "new" oil in all my older cars - no worries - ever. The only time you REALLY need a Zinc additive is during break-in for a NEW flat tappet cam. Although they say a little Zinc (more is NOT btter) can help avoid metal to metal wear in extreme rpm conditions, when I (or most machine shops) rebuilt an "old" engine with it's ORIGINAL cam - any oil is OK. After break-in of your flat-tappet cam you can go back to "new" oil, old oil, whatever. I don't know of any "muscle car" guys that would pay you more for the "old oil". I wouldn't.
As far as "new oil for new cars" - they removed the Zinc just to save the Catalytic Converters. Has little to do with the engines as roller rockers decrease metal to metal wear so much they are fine without the Zinc.
As far as using up a gallon in your lawn mower - that'd last 10 years in my mower!
Yeah it's the reason I run 15w40 oil in all my stuff. The 2 diesel trucks, my Jeep, my car, tractor, pressure washer, etc. Lots of zinc in diesel oil. Plus it's $8 a gal for Rotella.
Unless your running very high lift and high spring pressures then you need the ZDDP everytime you change the oil other wise goodbye cam lobes.

Are you sure that is what you meant to say? It doesn't even make sense...High spring pressures would be HARDER on your cam lobes, so that is where I "might" consider a ZDDP additive. Not the opposite.![]()

Not sure how to put it so you understand it...
You said
"I use "new" oil in all my older cars - no worries - ever. The only time you REALLY need a Zinc additive is during break-in for a NEW flat tappet cam"
I'm saying you DO need the Zinc Additive for higher spring pressures all the time not just for break-in.
Wow not sure how you got that backwords![]()
No, e-tek is right. To someone who understands the topic, it's obvious what you meant BUT the way you worded your reply originally is backwards.
Yeah it's the reason I run 15w40 oil in all my stuff. The 2 diesel trucks, my Jeep, my car, tractor, pressure washer, etc. Lots of zinc in diesel oil. Plus it's $8 a gal for Rotella.
Calbert, is that your Ron fellows Corvette?
Not sure how to put it so you understand it...
You said
"I use "new" oil in all my older cars - no worries - ever. The only time you REALLY need a Zinc additive is during break-in for a NEW flat tappet cam"
I'm saying you DO need the Zinc Additive for higher spring pressures all the time not just for break-in.
Wow not sure how you got that backwords![]()

