You make some very good points - thanks for contributing

Originally Posted by
Diesel_vert
Engine oils are a finely mixed balance of base oils and additives. In fact, additives are extensively used by all lubricant manufacturers and are an important component in the make up of almost every engine oil.
That's a very important fact that I forgot to mention
Oils alone would not work without a careful blend of important additives
Only the (API) SA oils have no additives and are therefore incapable of protecting modern engines
The required additives are needed to:
- Control chemical breakdown (detergent, corrosion, antioxidant, metal deactivators)
- Viscosity modification
- Lubricity (friction modifiers, extreme pressure agents, anti wear agents)
- Contamination control (dispersants, anti foam, antimisting, etc)
- Other (seal conditioners etc)
And when you put an after market additive into your oil, you are messing with this delicate blend
For example, Liqui Moly make a MOS anti friction oil additive
But if you are using a high or full zine engine oil or a race oil it is not advisable to add MOS

Originally Posted by
Diesel_vert
The only real conclusive method of determining wear is by doing an engine tear-down and measuring the relevant components - which is of course, what the vehicle manufacturers subject the lubricant manufacturer's products to when applying for an approval. It is also without a doubt, a very expensive process.
Actually they don't do tear down inspections for rating or manufacturer approvals!
It all done in labs now - via simulations and chemical testing
You send away a sample, pay your money, wait a month to get the outcome...

Originally Posted by
Diesel_vert
If one believes or assumes that such engine oils need a helping hand by way of aftermarket or off-the-shelf additives, I think it would be better to use an alternative high-quality synthetic engine oil (Amsoil, Redline, etc) - even if they're not approved - before resorting to additives.
Agreed - but VAG users running the long service interval oils don't need to do this.
There are four base oil types that go into all oils, 1 & 2 are mineral, 3 = semi synthetic, 4 & 5 are fully synthetic
There are very few world wide sources for base oils (Singapore has a high quality plant)
In order to meet the long life specifications, a type 4 fully synthetic oil has to be used, the others won't pass the testing
So VAG 504/505/507 users are getting a really good oil product
Whether it's wise to run that out for 15k is another question (I don't)
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