Register now to get rid of these ads!

Technical Marvel Mystery Oil

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by 34Larry, Mar 31, 2021.

  1. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

    Adding it to my oil on this change. Formula is replace 20% of the oil with MMM. That is close to being a qt. and in fact the MMM website says if your ride takes 5 qts, replace 1 of those with MMM. I've never had the opportunity to work with MMM and that seems like it might be excessive. My HEMI does use 5 qts. with filter and am leery of going with that much MMM.
    Who here has used it at the recommended amout of 4 qts oil, to 1 qt. MMM and how did that work for you???
     
  2. atomickustom
    Joined: Aug 30, 2005
    Posts: 3,409

    atomickustom
    Member

    I used a full quart with every oil change for years in a couple different cars with no problems.
    However, the other 4 quarts I'd go one level thicker (20w50 instead of 10w40, for example) because that stuff is thin!

    Sent from my SM-G981V using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
     
    kmn5 and olscrounger like this.
  3. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

    And that is what concerned me. But I l started out with 10/30 at first and there was no problem.
    I'll stay with the 20/40 and see what takes place. And thanks for your reply atomickustom.
    And BTW I spent the night once, with a friend, in Joplin waaaaaaaaaaay back in 1960. He was from there and we were in the USAF. He showed me around a little, I liked it.
     
  4. Almostdone
    Joined: Dec 19, 2019
    Posts: 895

    Almostdone
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I’m not saying don’t add MMM to your oil, but I don’t se why you would need to add it to modern oils. What’s the reason?
     
    inaford30 and Blues4U like this.

  5. I like to add a quart to the oil just before an oil change,,and let it work on the varnish buildup in the engine .
    It cleans behind the ring grooves and lets them seal better,,,,,and cleans excess funk from the inner block walls .
    Then after a 100 miles or so,,,,I change the oil,,,,,it helps to keep the inside cleaner .

    Tommy
     
  6. oldiron 440
    Joined: Dec 12, 2018
    Posts: 3,320

    oldiron 440
    Member

    I've heard its crap like STP and all the other gimmick additives.
     
  7. atomickustom
    Joined: Aug 30, 2005
    Posts: 3,409

    atomickustom
    Member

    It's just pure refined oil. It keeps things clean inside the engine. It may not be necessary, but as far as I know it doesn't do any harm, either.
    I started using it in a car with a sticky lifter. Fixed it right away and kept it fixed for the several more years I drove that car. That was enough to make me happy with it.
    Sent from my SM-G981V using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
     
  8. plym_46
    Joined: Sep 8, 2005
    Posts: 4,018

    plym_46
    Member
    from central NY

    Petroleum distillates, Stoddard solvent and red dye....what's the mystery?
     
  9. bchctybob
    Joined: Sep 18, 2011
    Posts: 5,244

    bchctybob
    Member

    I put a pint in the wife's Corvair when I did the oil change last week. It's got one lifter that makes noise if you let it sit for too long without starting it. This engine was rebuilt and then sat dormant for 20+ years when the car's brakes failed and the owner decided not to throw any more money at it. I got it, changed the oil, cleaned out the carbs, squirted some MMM in each cylinder and fired it up. Slowly but surely it ran better and better. It's had quite a few oil changes, each with a dose of MMM. At this point it runs great but every now and then that one lifter sounds off.
     
    JeffB2 and 61SuperMonza like this.
  10. JeffB2
    Joined: Dec 18, 2006
    Posts: 9,499

    JeffB2
    Member
    from Phoenix,AZ

    A lot of folks have used MMO to free up an old engine that has just sat for decades and it seems to work, also a lot of Marine guys use it to combat the bad effects of ethanol fuels. I know it seems to be a decent carbon blaster when added to the gas tank.
     
  11. TheSteamDoc
    Joined: Jul 14, 2018
    Posts: 325

    TheSteamDoc
    Member

    How does MMM work out for y'all? Been told Sea foam can help as well. Wanna try it with my daily. 196,000 on the clock.
     
  12. v8flat44
    Joined: Nov 13, 2017
    Posts: 1,211

    v8flat44

    Knew a guy who worked for Delta Air Lines. He said they used MMO in all of their ground vehicles for longer engine life. He uses it in his personal vehicles. Stopped a sticking valve in my flatty.
     
  13. Blues4U
    Joined: Oct 1, 2015
    Posts: 7,589

    Blues4U
    Member
    from So Cal

    MMO is basically napthenic base oil with some benzene, some dye, and some say it has some wintergreen oil in it for aroma. It works to free rings and sticky lifters by solubolizing the heavy contaminants.

    Here's the thing about lubricating oils, the cheaper and poorer the quality of the base oil, the better solvency they have; and the better, more expensive base oils (including full synthetic PAO) the poorer solvency they have (that's why PAO based lubes use some synthetic ester as a carrier to solubilize the additives). So yes, you put this cheap shit in your oil and it may just clean up some old tar in your engine, because it's an old engine from when engine oils were crap (compared to modern oils), or because you don't change the oil very often. Yes, than by all means, using some of this low grade base oil can help clean up the lacquers and deposits that form in the engine. But then you want to drain that crap out, get it out of there, because the nature of highly solvent low grade oils is they are not very stable, meaning they will react with oxygen at low temperature. They will oxidize rapidly, and they will cause the very problem you're trying to clean up. Oxidation is the main aging process of lubricants, it causes the oil to darken in color and increase in viscosity; it leads to the formation of larger & heavier compounds that fall out of suspension and because they are polar they cling to surfaces and form those lacquer coatings you see in old engines.

    To add this stuff to modern engine oils is crazy, really not good to do guys. This is a holdover from years gone by (decades gone by), when engine oils were far less developed, and engines had no positive crankcase ventilation to remove moisture and volatile fumes that collect inside an engine and foul the oil. Modern oils are far more resistant to oxidation, and they have substantial detergent/dispersant additives to break up and clean up deposits, or prevent them from forming. And then you go an add this crap and ruin everything. If you replace 1 of 5 qts with this, you've diluted the high quality modern base oil with 20% cheap napthenic oil, and you've diluted all of the additives in the oil with this crap, and who knows how the benzenes are going to react with the additive package? What is the effect on oxidation resistance? I can guarantee you it's not good.
     
    ottoman, rmcroadster, egads and 10 others like this.
  14. Jack E/NJ
    Joined: Mar 5, 2011
    Posts: 839

    Jack E/NJ
    Member
    from NJ

    No, the wintergreen oil is mainly for soothing aches & pains. Jack E/NJ
     
  15. Truck64
    Joined: Oct 18, 2015
    Posts: 5,325

    Truck64
    Member
    from Ioway

    It's a synthetic wintergreen. One of the better penetrating oils around. That's why it is included.

    Marvels definitely has its uses. Modern OT engines have EFI and electronic ignition, computer engine controls and temperature regulation, they don't have the problems the old school iron routinely ran into. It isn't even close.

    It was very common for people to run poorly tuned engines for extended intervals and (later) also typical to run into stale oxidized gasoline residues after sitting out in the weeds, etc, lots of gum or varnish and carbon buildup on valves, lifters, and piston rings etc. That's what the penetrating oil & light solvents are designed to address. If you can free stuck rings, sticky lifters or valves etc., without tearing the engine apart that's a good thing in my book.
     
    Ford52PU and bchctybob like this.
  16. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

    A repeatable sticky valve and I'm hoping this will solve that.
     
  17. olscrounger
    Joined: Feb 23, 2008
    Posts: 4,774

    olscrounger
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I use it in all of the older cars. Add a bit to gas and oil. Don't know if it is a great addition but my dad used it in everything on the ranch when I was growing up. Keep a good bit on hand.
     
    Truck64 and i.rant like this.
  18. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

     
    Blues4U likes this.
  19. Truckedup
    Joined: Jul 25, 2006
    Posts: 4,660

    Truckedup
    Member

    If you have use modern detergent oil and change it when required and have sticky valves.....the engine has issues that need more than a little solvent dumped into the oil
     
  20. The only additive I will run and have run it in a variety of engines is Lucas oil stabilizer
     
    BamaMav and Fordor Ron like this.
  21. bchctybob
    Joined: Sep 18, 2011
    Posts: 5,244

    bchctybob
    Member

    I was hoping Blues4U would chime in, always good information. I've never been a fan of additives in a healthy engine but I do use some in my older and worn out engines. My old green riding lawn mower gets STP and like I said above, my wife's Corvair gets a shot of MMM with each oil change.
    I'm wondering; now that I've done a half a dozen or more flush/treatment oil changes and the Corvair seems to be running consistently well, what oil would be best for that old, air cooled, high RPM engine?
     
  22. Joe Travers
    Joined: Mar 21, 2021
    Posts: 708

    Joe Travers
    Member
    from Louisiana

    Have you tried Lucas Classic Car and Hot Rod oil? It has highest level of zinc I can find. Modern oils are very low in zinc and aren't very protective to wear in older engines. Oil companies had to lower zinc content due to catalytic converter failures when emission standards started to ramp up. Modern oil just doesn't cut it in old engines.

    Joe
     
  23. I think I would head over to the SAMBA (HAMB = for Vdubs) and see what the VW guys are using.
     
  24. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

    No Joe on the Lucas oil, never heard of it. Where, besides on line, is it available?
     
  25. If it is an intake valve try putting it in your gas instead.

    I have never run it in my oil so I really cannot answer your question on that. I have used to for top end oil before with good success.
     
    olscrounger and Flat Six Fix like this.
  26. jimmy six
    Joined: Mar 21, 2006
    Posts: 14,903

    jimmy six
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I can buy Lucas Hot Rod oil at ACE Auto Parts in Huntington Beach and I do. Bruce is a local good guy whose family has been in hot rodding for years and he stocks it along with AN fittings, single wire alternators, 5 gallon cans of VP racing gasoline..etc.....
     
    rod1 likes this.
  27. I get Lucas classic car and hot rod oil at Western Auto here on the island.
     
  28. Joe Travers
    Joined: Mar 21, 2021
    Posts: 708

    Joe Travers
    Member
    from Louisiana

    I get mine from NAPA in the 5 qt. jug.
    If they don't have it in stock, I can order online and pick up the following day.

    Joe
     
  29. 34Larry
    Joined: Apr 25, 2011
    Posts: 1,737

    34Larry
    Member

    I'll look for it at our new NAPA store.
    Oil is changed (4) qts. Castrol 10/40 (1) qt. MMO. Ran it for up to 20/30 minutes in the shop. Might be my imagination but it seems a little quieter on the lifter end of things, the small amount of smoke I think/thought might be blow by didn't show up either. But it takes longer than that see what might be blow by and I know you'd all say, "If it is blow by you'd see it in 20/30 minuets". I most often see it at idle while sitting at a traffic light coming out of the valve cover breather. Very embarrassing.
    When it was supposedly rebuilt cylinder bore was checked and bored 60 over with new pistons/rings (so they said) . IF that is the truth, there of course should be no blow by and maybe there's a ring not working like intended ???
     
    Boneyard51 and Joe Travers like this.
  30. Budget36
    Joined: Nov 29, 2014
    Posts: 13,241

    Budget36
    Member

    I’ve only run it through the carb, or added to the fuel. For lifters tick now and the, I’d use Rislone, not sure if Rislone is around anymore
     
    egads likes this.

Share This Page

Register now to get rid of these ads!

Archive

Copyright © 1995-2021 The Jalopy Journal: Steal our stuff, we'll kick your teeth in. Terms of Service. Privacy Policy.

Atomic Industry
Forum software by XenForo™ ©2010-2014 XenForo Ltd.