All my numbers look good with the exception of Iron and Copper. There are a few reasons for the higher numbers, although the trend shows a drop in copper between changes. I need to investigate the Iron numbers. I should also note I am running Aeroshell 15W50 oil and some folks say that tends to produce higher copper numbers.
Most Common Sources of Wear Metal Elements in Oil:
- Iron - Cylinders, rotating shafts, valve train and any steel part sharing the oil.
- Copper- Brass or bronze parts, bushings, bearings, oil coolers, sacrificial coatings.
- Nickel - Valve guides, trace element in steel, some cylinder types.
- Chromium - Rings, cylinders, a trace element in steel.
- Silver - Sacrificial coatings, a trace element in some types of bearings, bearing cage plating
- Magnesium - Engine casings, additives
- Aluminum - Pistons, piston pin plugs, bearing overlay, casings.
- Lead - Primarily leaded gas blow-by, traces from bearings
- Silicon - Abrasive dirt from intake air, silicone sealers and gaskets, sample contamination.
- Tin - Bearings, bronze parts (with copper), anti-wear coatings.
I will continue to research the Iron numbers and discus the report with Roger at Cecil Aero, 08Romeo's real caretaker.
Very Interesting! I'm up for my first oil change (25 hours) this week. I'll be studying the numbers for a Rotax.
ReplyDeleteDave,
ReplyDeleteAt the very least there is a good history on the engine and from everything I read it provides a good trend that can provide a heads up on whats going on inside.
I think I paid @ $13 for the sample container and it was cheap to mail it in, no special package.