On 3/22/2009 10:16 AM, Armand Eshleman spouted this sage advice: > 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. If you're changing oil every 2000 miles, it's unlikely there is much of a sludge problem. Also, synthetic oils typically have a lot of detergents in them and will clean the engine pretty well. When I switched to Mobil One in my last Ram (it had about 20,000 miles on it when I switched), the first few oil changes (which I did at regular intervals) got a lot of stuff out of the engine. After all the sludge was out, I started changing oil every 10,000 miles and it came out almost as clean as it went in. I would just drain the oil, change the filter, fill with a synthetic, and not worry about it. One thing I will say is that 20w50 is very heavy oil. Unless you have loose bearing clearances (like on a race motor), you'll get better gas mileage and easier cold weather starting with 10w30. Matt -- mhaas@xxxxxxx Cincinnati, OH http://www.mattsoldcars.com 1967 Rambler American wagon 1968 Rambler American sedan ================================================================= According to a February 2003 survey of Internet holdouts released by UCLA's Center for Communication Policy, people cite not having a computer as the No. 1 reason they won't go online. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list