quote:Wow F1GT I think it's pretty funny how scared you seem to be about what I have said about oil companys making people disapear. It happens. First off they try to buy the rights to the product and spend millions of dollars to do this and then they own the patents. Once they own the patents the ideas sit on a shelf and will never see the light of day. If the inventor wont sell, their house just happens to catch fire and burns down, or they themself are never seen again. Or they are seen again but not alive. Hmm how or wonder why this happens?Scared? Soommmeeebody has been watching too many movies and reading too many mystery/spy books. Time for a reality check. quote:If you believe things like this don't happen, your to close minded for your own good. RiiiggghtttThis coming from an Administrator. I think you should do your job and administer and moderate this board. Not jumping into members' disagreements and flaming members with assumptions. How mature and respectful for a moderator. :rolling eyes:quote:Being in the U.S.C.G. I have seen and heard things that would make most people throw up. I wont go into detail so don't ask but in the federal building where I'm stationed the FBI is next door to the CG group I'm located in. We work with them from time to time, and things like what I have just said happen. They happen everyday. Either the people that make these terrible things happen are very good at covering up the truth or people are paid off in high places. Also realize huge companys and corporations have the best lawyers in the world. UMMKKAAAYYY, Mr. Paranoia. Step away from the computer, put the crack pipe down, and drift back for a reality check.quote:The technology is out there for vehicles to travel 100s of miles on a gallon of gas but you and I will never see to it because if we did someone's wallet would get hit pretty hard. I have said enough about the subject and will stop there.Yes, PLEASE do stop here. Every one of your post is like a novel.quote:Now back to the oil. Recent tests at Mobil have demonstrated synthetic motor oils with a three year, 25,000 mile life span. AMSOIL has had 25,000 mile drain intervals for 25 years, only recently introducing a motor oil inside a somewhat "normal" range, that is, 7500 miles.... which some insist is still too long.U know, I really don't give a rat's azz about your synthetic and what you think of it, ok? It's YOUR opinion. Your conlusion. Give it up! Drop it! I am not even talking about synthetics. I was talking about NovaResources' oil change interval. Jesus Christ, just because you are moderating and administering this sight doesn't make you the ALL KNOWLEDGEABLE car guru. In fact some of your posts are just reiterations of what someone else posted. What is the point in that?? Trying to be pretentious??This is a quote from this website.
http://mr2.com/TEXT/synth_oil.txtquote:One of our cars is a 1979 GM sedan whose odometerand maintenance records reveal over 200,000 miles of driving, with nevera missed-beat of its 350 cu. in. gasoline engine, and which has neveronce required an engine repair... not even a minor one! It still runsas well as the day it was new, it's sparkling clean inside, and allcylinders check out to original compression specs. For all but thefirst 12,000 miles it has thrived on a strict diet of premium syntheticmotor oil, changed only once every 25,000 miles. When we began researchfor this article, no one had to convince us that synthetics offerdistinct advantages.]Contrary to what many may believe, synthetic lubricants are not a recentdevelopment. As early as the 1930s, Standard Oil of Indiana conductedresearch into synthetic oil. More serious development and productionwas commenced by the Germans during WWII, as their conventionallubricants congealed and froze on the Eastern front and stalled theiradvances into the Soviet Union. As jet engines were developed after thewar, it soon became evident that conventional lubricating oils couldn'twithstand the high temperatures and pressures, and synthetics came to beused in all military commercial jet aircraft engines. Then in the 1960shistory repeated itself, and it was again cold weather that spurredfurther development work as the U.S. Army needed better lubricants forArctic and Antarctic use. Still later, NASA specified synthetic-basedlubes for all space vehicles, including the Space Shuttle. Today'sautomotive synthetic lubricants have evolved as an almost direct resultof these demanding military and extraterrestrial lubricationrequirements.I wont quote anymore but the website I have provided explain synthetic oils in great detail and it's very easy to under. I enjoyed reading and all ready knew of much of what it talked about.Also realize this. All modern day fighter jets the U.S. military has use synthetic. They never change the oil. NEVER! They only change the filters after so many hours of operations and then add what the filter took away when replacing. The only time the oil is changed is if there is a repair that has to be made that requires the oil to come out of the engine. If it's good enough for the military and the space shuttle it's good enough for me.That's why oil needs changing, because the additives in them breakdown. They replenished that, duh!200,000 miles and still looking sparkling clean with the heads takin out and checking the valves, the walls, the pistons, etc. eh?? Wow, what a miracle oil. Must be a miracle from God. The oil is so good, it gets rid of carbon deposits too, huh? Didn't you also say that switching to synthetic, your car ran cooler?? So what? They add anti-freeze in your oil?? Ever heard of the Placebo Effect?? I think you are suffering from that. Referring to the above quote on the '79 Chevy, again, practice what you preach:quote:Don't beleive everything you read. Research everything.Please stop with all the preposterous claims and statements. It's really beginning to be an annoyance. Time to lock this thread and stop the flames. Go ahead and get the last word, I won't even bother with it. I know it's going to be more false claims and immature assumptions. Here's a little tip for the future of your moderating career: Being a moderator, you should keep the threads in check. Don't instigate and don't fuel the flames. If it starts to get members angry, it is time to lock the thread. Be mature and respectful in your post and replies.
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