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CAUTION WHEN CHOOSING OIL
#61
When I lived in England I used to put Castor oil in my lawn mower engine , loved mowing the lawn !
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#62
(08-11-2014, 12:06 AM)The Spaceman_imp Wrote: I'm using Marvel Mystery Oil. It smells like cinnamon buns, fresh from the oven. For even more cinnamon scent, you can put a capful in your gas tank every fill up.

Marvel Mystery Oil...since 1923!

http://www.marvelmysteryoil.com

We've run Marvel before in the gas tank of my dad's '66 Mustang which normally burns oil. The Marvel makes it burn cleanly with no perceptible oil vapor! Smile


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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#63
Amazing thread. Quite the entertainment!
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#64
(08-26-2013, 08:26 AM)Flynrider_imp Wrote:
(08-26-2013, 06:03 AM)Rboe_imp Wrote: Years ago I had extremely good luck with Golden Spectro but I also changed oil and filter every 2000 miles. I think that had as much to do with the excellent shape the motor was in than the oil I choose.

The Guzzi guys really like Rotella but the engine and tranny are separate with different oils so no clutch worries. After owning a Guzzi I think one could make a very good case to keep the engine and tranny separate. It would be easier to do on the inline fours if the motor was length wise like the Triumph Rocket or the Henderson Four but that makes for long bikes (which is fine by me; but I got long arms).

My biggest gripe about the oil change; the weather is conspiring to keep me off the darn bike so I can get the miles on to justify its' first oil change. It's enough to make you shake your cane against the sky.

One of the better oil threads I've ever read was over on ThumperTalk.com. Some guy went through a bunch of oils (and miles; the data was staggering) and sent the oil out to be analyzed. Turns out, on the XR650L, with that four valve head, without an oil cooler ANY oil was toast at around 500 miles. He installed an oil cooler. I will too.

But like anything else; if you don't know squawt; stick to the manual. The more you know the more you can experiment and still be safe. Me; I'm going to experiment with chain lube oil for now. Excited

But a hearty thank you to the original poster regarding Rotella oil. Good to know and fills in wee bit of darkness. Thanks

Oil analysis is the key. I ran a series on my CB750 several years ago and learned some equally surprising things. Mainly that an air cooled motorcycle that operates in 100+ temps for about 6 months out of the year will cook/churn a multigrade dino oil to its base weight in less than 2K miles. The combination of high operating temps and shearing by the tranny gears is pretty brutal on the polymer chains that are responsible for keeping the oil thick at higher temps.

As a result, I cut my oil change intervals to 1500 mi. on the CB750. I went to a synthetic on the CB11, as it is supposed to hold its properties better under high temps. Of course, I won't know for sure until I get several samples analyzed.

If you really want to know what's going on inside your engine, a consistent series of oil analysis will tell you more than any post in a forum.

Oil analysis is the key. I ran a series on my CB750 several years ago and learned some equally surprising things. Mainly that an air cooled motorcycle that operates in 100+ temps for about 6 months out of the year will cook/churn a multigrade dino oil to its base weight in less than 2K miles. The combination of high operating temps and shearing by the tranny gears is pretty brutal on the polymer chains that are responsible for keeping the oil thick at higher temps.

As a result, I cut my oil change intervals to 1500 mi. on the CB750. I went to a synthetic on the CB11, as it is supposed to hold its properties better under high temps. Of course, I won't know for sure until I get several samples analyzed.

If you really want to know what's going on inside your engine, a consistent series of oil analysis will tell you more than any post in a forum.
I hate to weigh back in on an oil thread but have been bored over the winter. Appreciate the info fly. Im well aware of the benifits of oil analysis but I am not smart enough to understand them in their totality. What oil do you run in the 750?

I was changing mine at about 2K miles give or take just hoping to be on the safe side with Shell Rotella 15w 40. I was planning on doing the same thing on the 1100. Have not changed it yet. I know you know your stuff if your a pilot because planes are extremely well cared for.

Tell me what you run in each bike and your intervals on changes. Thanks. I think we are maybe on the only members here that have NIghthawks and a CB11 to boot.
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#65
Bored over the winter? It's not winter for another 7 days.
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#66
I just want to know if anyone runs the mobil 1 racing 4T in their CB1100, and whether they've had any issues?

~Neo
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#67
Aarrrgggghhhh! Back to the Bundy - guaranteed to keep one well oiled.

Cheers
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#68
See [url=http://cb1100forum.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=4553&pid=68787#pid68787]here. 30W/800 snake oil's what the nice boy at SuperCheap sold us, isn't Pterodactyl? CB's still running like a top.
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#69
(08-24-2013, 09:11 PM)meowguy_imp Wrote: Oil is simply beyond my ability to fully understand. Since Honda Motor Co. has people they pay specifically for this purpose and who know what oil to use in this bike, why would you not just use what they recommend and your dealer sells?

+1
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#70
(12-16-2014, 03:58 AM)powerdogg11_imp Wrote:
(08-24-2013, 09:11 PM)meowguy_imp Wrote: Oil is simply beyond my ability to fully understand. Since Honda Motor Co. has people they pay specifically for this purpose and who know what oil to use in this bike, why would you not just use what they recommend and your dealer sells?

+1

+1
+1
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