I've been using Mobil 1 in my cars for 15-20 years, mostly purchased on sale at Costco. I've always considered it one of the top synthetic engine oils and wasn't going to spend more on other oils' fancy marketing. As past cars have gotten up in miles -- my '98 V70 T5 now has 252K on its block -- I would typically need to top up the engine with 1/2 quart additions every 500-1500 miles depending on the car. On my V70, that interval was closer to 500.
Uncharacteristically, I recently had a shop do an oil change on my V70 and they used Motul 8100 Xclean 5W-30. I was a little annoyed at having to pony up $10/qt but at least I didn't have to get dirty or worry about disposing of used oil+filter.
And then, over the following weeks and months as I'd check my oil, I noticed that the level wasn't dropping.. at all. At first I thought I was measuring the oil with the car on an imperceptible incline but over time and over more checks I came to realize that the oil level simply wasn't dropping. Stunned, I started googling this phenomenon and was surprised to learn that this was indeed a property about Motul oil.. that it was far less prone to burning than many other oils.. Mobil 1 included. I called the shop to ask about this and they said it was something they were aware of.
Even though it costs 2X what Mobil 1 costs, I'm going to stick with Motul because I don't like having to always check my oil and constantly top it up. If you're running a high miles car and are needing to top up your oil on a regular basis, I'd recommend you try this Motul oil. This must come off like a shameless product plug but I have no affiliation with or commercial interest in Motul.
Motul oil doesn't burn
- erikv11
- Posts: 11800
- Joined: 25 July 2009
- Year and Model: 850, V70, S60R, XC70
- Location: Iowa
- Has thanked: 292 times
- Been thanked: 765 times
Keep in mind the change has nothing to do with the Motul oil not burning. Rather, where the car had oil leak(s) with the oil you used before, e.g. internal leaks past the valve stem seals, the leaking is much reduced with this new oil. Similar results can perhaps be achieved by using any of a number of "high mileage" oils, or a heavier weight in your very mild bay area climate.
Good to hear you found something that works so well in your car.
Good to hear you found something that works so well in your car.
'95 854 T-5R, Motronic 4.4, 185k
'98 V70, T5 tune-injectors-turbo, LPT engine, 304k, daily driver
'06 S60 R, 197k
'07 XC70, black, 205k
'07 XC70, willow green, 212k
'99 Camry V6
153k
gone: '96 NA 850 210k, '98 NA V70 182k, '98 S70 NA 225k, '96 855 NA 169k
'98 V70, T5 tune-injectors-turbo, LPT engine, 304k, daily driver
'06 S60 R, 197k
'07 XC70, black, 205k
'07 XC70, willow green, 212k
'99 Camry V6
gone: '96 NA 850 210k, '98 NA V70 182k, '98 S70 NA 225k, '96 855 NA 169k
- erikv11
- Posts: 11800
- Joined: 25 July 2009
- Year and Model: 850, V70, S60R, XC70
- Location: Iowa
- Has thanked: 292 times
- Been thanked: 765 times
That's also good!
'95 854 T-5R, Motronic 4.4, 185k
'98 V70, T5 tune-injectors-turbo, LPT engine, 304k, daily driver
'06 S60 R, 197k
'07 XC70, black, 205k
'07 XC70, willow green, 212k
'99 Camry V6
153k
gone: '96 NA 850 210k, '98 NA V70 182k, '98 S70 NA 225k, '96 855 NA 169k
'98 V70, T5 tune-injectors-turbo, LPT engine, 304k, daily driver
'06 S60 R, 197k
'07 XC70, black, 205k
'07 XC70, willow green, 212k
'99 Camry V6
gone: '96 NA 850 210k, '98 NA V70 182k, '98 S70 NA 225k, '96 855 NA 169k
- wizechatmgr
- Posts: 1798
- Joined: 12 January 2017
- Year and Model: 1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4T
- Location: Albany, NY area
- Has thanked: 45 times
- Been thanked: 126 times
- Contact:
I think Eric is trying to say is that there may be other factors. Rebuilding the top end doesn't negate the need to redo the bottom end (piston rings, etc...) to avoid other sources of oil consumption.
I've noticed in my car that as the oil progressively deteriorates, the more it tends to leak as well as burn as time goes on.
Wisdom requires knowledge as a prerequisite, but knowledge can be developed due to a lack of wisdom.
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
- June
- Posts: 2275
- Joined: 4 May 2016
- Year and Model: 2004 S80 T6,1991 740
- Location: Arkansas
- Has thanked: 523 times
- Been thanked: 261 times
Motul 8100 5W30 is 100% synthetic oil group 4 vs Mobil1 group 3 oil. Research about types of synthetic oils like group 3, 4, and 5 oils and perhaps that is the difference. They sold you real synthetic oil, that is why you played more. June
My Volvo cars owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
-
Sommerfeldt
- Posts: 1148
- Joined: 29 July 2008
- Year and Model: 2018 S90 T8
- Location: Oslo Area, Norway
- Has thanked: 55 times
- Been thanked: 42 times
June has a good point.
Interestingly, this is something I don't think we've discussed much in the endless oil debates. Earlier, there were discussions about synth oils causing leaks, but I'd venture that most of us are using G3 oils, not G4. With the additives and processes that G3 oil goes through to make it "synthetic", that may very well have been the cause of them making old seals fail. I can't remember anyone saying that very recently, but still.
I don't think Nathanso's experience with a true synthetic oil should be dismissed as "could've been other things". If you change one single thing, and there's a measurable alteration in a directly related condition, then that's a pretty good indicator that the thing you changed was the cause of that change. Writing it off as "weeeeeeeell........ could have been something else, maybe perhaps" doesn't really hold water.
I'm coming up on an oil change as well - my T5 doesn't use much oil, but it'd still be interesting to try Motul and see if there's any kind of difference.
- S
Interestingly, this is something I don't think we've discussed much in the endless oil debates. Earlier, there were discussions about synth oils causing leaks, but I'd venture that most of us are using G3 oils, not G4. With the additives and processes that G3 oil goes through to make it "synthetic", that may very well have been the cause of them making old seals fail. I can't remember anyone saying that very recently, but still.
I don't think Nathanso's experience with a true synthetic oil should be dismissed as "could've been other things". If you change one single thing, and there's a measurable alteration in a directly related condition, then that's a pretty good indicator that the thing you changed was the cause of that change. Writing it off as "weeeeeeeell........ could have been something else, maybe perhaps" doesn't really hold water.
I'm coming up on an oil change as well - my T5 doesn't use much oil, but it'd still be interesting to try Motul and see if there's any kind of difference.
- S
2018 S90 T8 Inscription - glossy black with amber interior and dark as night rear windows.
[Gone] '96 855 T5 - R bumper and spoiler, Koni Yellows & blue H&R springs all 'round.
[Sold] '97 S70 T5
[Gone] '95 855 T5-R - one of the black ones... sadly stolen and wrecked.
[Gone] '96 855 T5 - R bumper and spoiler, Koni Yellows & blue H&R springs all 'round.
[Sold] '97 S70 T5
[Gone] '95 855 T5-R - one of the black ones... sadly stolen and wrecked.
- Rattnalle
- Posts: 1674
- Joined: 1 September 2017
- Year and Model: 2004 V70 2.5T
- Location: Sweden
- Has thanked: 20 times
- Been thanked: 133 times
Synthetic oil and leaks isn't only about seals failing. It's as much about better cleaning properties and less buildup of the solid crud that's kept an already worn out engine from leaking by plugging the holes.
The two Volvo fives with 200k plus miles that I've owned both used very little oil, a litre or so every 10' miles at most. Both using synthetic. Neither was serviced excessively but rather by the book once a year or so.
The two Volvo fives with 200k plus miles that I've owned both used very little oil, a litre or so every 10' miles at most. Both using synthetic. Neither was serviced excessively but rather by the book once a year or so.
- June
- Posts: 2275
- Joined: 4 May 2016
- Year and Model: 2004 S80 T6,1991 740
- Location: Arkansas
- Has thanked: 523 times
- Been thanked: 261 times
Is it safe to say over there in Sweden all synthetic oil is group 4 or 5 100% synthetic? So those two 5cyl 200k cars actually ran 100% synthetic oil?Rattnalle wrote: ↑03 Dec 2018, 01:58 Synthetic oil and leaks isn't only about seals failing. It's as much about better cleaning properties and less buildup of the solid crud that's kept an already worn out engine from leaking by plugging the holes.
The two Volvo fives with 200k plus miles that I've owned both used very little oil, a litre or so every 10' miles at most. Both using synthetic. Neither was serviced excessively but rather by the book once a year or so.
My engine is a testimony that even with 3K oil changes group 3 "fully synthetic" crap we are sold over here creates deposits inside the engine which clearly is visible under the oil cap of my car. I find it criminal that the oil companies were allowed to change the product without posting a warning label on the bottle or at least change the label enough that the difference is noticeable.
After reading endless debates on here then noticing the crud under the oil cap back in 2016 I researched the subject and realized I could have saved a ton of money and simply let the dealer put in GTX and probably ended up with the same crud at half the price! So I finally made a informed decision 13 years late and switched my engine to Redline a group 5 oil which gave a noticeable difference immediately as the engine is noticeably quieter. Amazingly enough you are correct in that slowly the crud is dissolving under the oil cap now that my engine is actually running a real synthetic oil. June
My Volvo cars owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
-
Sommerfeldt
- Posts: 1148
- Joined: 29 July 2008
- Year and Model: 2018 S90 T8
- Location: Oslo Area, Norway
- Has thanked: 55 times
- Been thanked: 42 times
The cleaning properties come from additives in the G3 oil, as well as the processes it's put through. I think it's plausible that aside from the "excessive" cleaning, those may have had a detrimental effect on seals in the early days, though like I said, I've seen far less of those "I switched to synth and now my car's a ball of fire at the roadside" claims the last couple of years.June wrote: ↑03 Dec 2018, 03:36Is it safe to say over there in Sweden all synthetic oil is group 4 or 5 100% synthetic? So those two 5cyl 200k cars actually ran 100% synthetic oil?Rattnalle wrote: ↑03 Dec 2018, 01:58 Synthetic oil and leaks isn't only about seals failing. It's as much about better cleaning properties and less buildup of the solid crud that's kept an already worn out engine from leaking by plugging the holes.
The two Volvo fives with 200k plus miles that I've owned both used very little oil, a litre or so every 10' miles at most. Both using synthetic. Neither was serviced excessively but rather by the book once a year or so.
My engine is a testimony that even with 3K oil changes group 3 "fully synthetic" crap we are sold over here creates deposits inside the engine which clearly is visible under the oil cap of my car. I find it criminal that the oil companies were allowed to change the product without posting a warning label on the bottle or at least change the label enough that the difference is noticeable.
After reading endless debates on here then noticing the crud under the oil cap back in 2016 I researched the subject and realized I could have saved a ton of money and simply let the dealer put in GTX and probably ended up with the same crud at half the price! So I finally made a informed decision 13 years late and switched my engine to Redline a group 5 oil which gave a noticeable difference immediately as the engine is noticeably quieter. Amazingly enough you are correct in that slowly the crud is dissolving under the oil cap now that my engine is actually running a real synthetic oil. June
Swedish (and Norwegian) oil is basically the same as you get in the US. The fluid in a bottle of Mobil 1 5w-50 isn't different here, at least not according to the MSDS's that I've seen. I'm curious about the G5 oil though - how do you know what that is? I can see switching to a G4, like Motul, but the G5 is just a "various other stuff", mostly additives as far as I can tell (though my knowledge base on this is far more lacking than I thought
- S
2018 S90 T8 Inscription - glossy black with amber interior and dark as night rear windows.
[Gone] '96 855 T5 - R bumper and spoiler, Koni Yellows & blue H&R springs all 'round.
[Sold] '97 S70 T5
[Gone] '95 855 T5-R - one of the black ones... sadly stolen and wrecked.
[Gone] '96 855 T5 - R bumper and spoiler, Koni Yellows & blue H&R springs all 'round.
[Sold] '97 S70 T5
[Gone] '95 855 T5-R - one of the black ones... sadly stolen and wrecked.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post






