Greetings to all, young &
old(er):
Someone wrote recently about
oil and additives - for their Imperials. On this, there are a few things
my daddy always insisted upon; however, only a few here.
Always use a good, name BRAND
oil, but a 'true Pennsylvania crude," as he put it. Namely, Quaker
State, Valvoline (foam-a-leene), or Pennzoil. Here, in Ohio (USA), I use
10W-30 in the winter, and 10W40 in the summer. He would insist upon
changes about every 3,000 miles, along with the filter -- which absolutely HAD
to be a Fram.
For an additive, the ONLY
thing he would permit was a small can (probably 8-10 ounces) of a product known
as Bardohl (spelling?) primarily for the oil -- but could go in to the
gas tank! And this was probably half way into the 3,000 for the oil. [This
has not been available here for maybe 20 years!]
Engines back in the 1930s-40s
were not as well set up to last the mileages which we demand today; back then,
IF the body was good, and one had the money, the course was for an engine
rebuild. The engines of the 1960s were better but, still, not the
best.
For gasoline, again, use a
know BRAND, and of only the octane needed. The gasoline of the 1950s-60s
WAS different than what is available today - both quality (ingredients/mixtures)
and octane ratings. Therefore, when one knows experts in the carburation
(spelling?) field and in your own geogrphic area, listen to them. The
guru here will sell you anything on his shelf (owns parts
distributoship) for what ever the price is for that product. His favorite
speech is, "You can buy/use this, at $6-10 per bottle, or do what I do in
all of my older cars, trucks, and boats. Go to any gas station and buy a
gallon of kerosene, then go to most any store and buy a quart of (brand) ATF
(automatic Transmission Fluid). Then, for a 20 gallon fill-up (of gas!),
mix SIX ounces of kerosene with SIX ounces of ATF, mix/shake thouroughly, then
put into gas tank prior to the gas. This will give your engine all the
lubrication it needs ('cause gas today is "NO-LEAD") and boost the
octane a couple of points, too."
So, gang, what to do!
There is no one answer for all situations. As I've been around for over 60
years, many of my father's traits have become my own - for good or not. In
my various cars, I use Valvoline or Pennzoil (but do not interchange), with
changes twice per year OR every 2,500 miles, Fram oil - gas - air filters, and
usually Marathon gas (or its subsidiary, Speedway), have used Shell, Citgo,
[ but will not use
BP/Standard/Sohio/ESSO ], and the atf/kerosene mix in the last
20 years. Yes, the ATF/K mix is used in all of the older cars, be they
Imperials or Packards, and, yes gang, they do run just fine! But, the cars
are driven lightly: they are not driven hard, fast, hot and put away wet!
Drove the 64 Crown Coupe ("Baby") from Ohio to New Jersey last July
for the WPC National Show Car Meet, some 1,260 miles on the intersates, and she
never missed a beat! [This is one show boat that is not a trailer
queen.]
What to do? Follow your
conscience - mainly, and, just maybe, listen to an old(er) man -- for once! I am
open to comments, naturally of a positive nature; but, please, no knives in the
back. What works for one person is not necessarily the only way to do
something, as we all learn something new everyday - right?! Thanks for the
time. Later, ne
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