I'm seriously thinking of getting the white Javelin operable again for the year after it's long winter sleep. The weather has warmed up and most of the snow is gone. We need a couple of good spring rains to clean the winter debris off the street, and I will be able to take the car out for a cruise. I put Sea Foam in the cylinders and blocked off the carburetor and exhaust last fall to keep air movement through the engine to a minimum. I rotated the engine over every so often with the belts. I will have to plug in the engine heater to get it warmed up before cranking the engine and getting it running because it has 40 weight racing oil in it and the temperatures around here are still pretty cool. I have five quarts of old Red Line 20W50 synthetic lube and two gallons of old 20W50 Amsoil synthetic lube. The containers have never been opened. I asked an Amsoil representative about using old synthetic and he said it would be absolutely OK. He said the synthetic lubricants don't deteriorate over time in a sealed container. What I'm thinking of doing is draining out a quart of the Valvoline racing oil that's in the engine now and adding a quart of engine flush. I'm hoping that will clean out the old stuff pretty good. I've heard that the pan should come off after doing this. I was wondering what you guys think. I have religiously changed oil every 2000 miles or so since I've owned the car. I have run the engine to full operating temperature almost every time I started it. I have replaced the valve cover gaskets in the last few years and did not see any buildup, just the light coating of oil black on the inside of the covers. I had the intake off the engine in the late 70s and saw a buildup of baked oil on the heat crossover area and the tin pan on the bottom of the intake. If I swap to an aluminum intake first and then flush the engine............. I don't think I can raise the engine enough to get the pan off because the T 5 transmission is almost up against the bottom of the tunnel. I don't think I can get the pan off without removing the engine, or dropping the crossmember. I'm not really sure I want to do that at this time. Am I being dumb?? (please keep the wisecracks to a minimum but they are allowed......... :-) Should I just leave well enough alone and continue to use the Valvoline 40 weight and not flush the engine or switch to synthetic? I have about a case of Valvoline 40 weight racing oil, from before they changed the ingredients. Plan was to use this for break in oil for a fresh engine, but I can always keep five quarts or so for that, or use that GM EOS and some "modern" oil. Should I use the synthetic without flushing the engine? Opinions and personal experience comments are welcome, Thanks, Armand _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list