Photo: Aaron Marsh/ Fleet Owner
Fleetowner 35355 112718 Oil Additives Agm I 1
Fleetowner 35355 112718 Oil Additives Agm I 1
Fleetowner 35355 112718 Oil Additives Agm I 1
Fleetowner 35355 112718 Oil Additives Agm I 1
Fleetowner 35355 112718 Oil Additives Agm I 1

Oil and additives: What's right for your fleet?

Nov. 27, 2018
There's a brave new world of fuel efficiency and operational savings in trucking—one that's enabled more by a combination of advanced engine hardware and oil technology than ever before. It only waits for fleets to embrace it, but you should also be thinking additives when selecting the right engine lubricant.

Sure, the trucking industry changes oil—drains it, that is. But when it comes to changing the type of oil itself fleets are used to using, that's a different story.

Nearly two years ago now, a page turned and a very significant new chapter began for oil in the United States. New, better-quality, more technologically advanced engine oil hit the market, promising fleets and trucking companies multiple benefits. So far, though, many have chosen not to change the status quo.

That's very much in-character. This is an industry that has long been skeptical and reluctant concerning changes to engine oil and big diesels in particular, and fleets need to keep their equipment protected.

"Prior to 1980, we were happy with an SAE 30 oil in both four-stroke and two-stroke diesel engines," says Mark Betner, heavy duty lubricants manager at Citgo Lubricants. He's spent 40 years in the lubricants industry, with 30 of those at Citgo, and has been active for decades in the American Trucking Associations' (ATA) Technology and Maintenance Council.

"A lot of automotive engineering research took place then" around 1980, he says, and a new advancement in oil was coming onto the scene. It was 15W-40 oil.

"I remember sitting in front of a very large fleet in the early '80s trying to explain why 15W-40 engine oil would be an improvement over SAE 30," notes Betner, speaking during a recent Fleet Owner webinar on the latest oils. "I explained that it would reduce engine wear; it would reduce upper engine deposits. It would even reduce oil consumption."

The fleet decision-maker in front of him "was very courteous" and listened through the whole spiel, he recalls. "At the end, he said, 'That was a good presentation, but I want you to take something back to your engineering friends for me.' I said, 'What's that, sir?'

"He said, 'Tell them that a 15W-40 will never work in a diesel engine.'"

All suspiciousness and reluctance aside, 15W-40 did work very well in diesel engines. It's been the most common oil viscosity grade around in fleet trucks across America for decades. But the latest engine oil options have now surpassed that stalwart oil.

For starters, says Betner, a 15W-40 is still a fairly thick oil to pump through an engine, and its performance in the cold is limited. "If you live in a northern state and experience those frigid, cold temperatures, keep in mind that a 15W-40 oil is only good down to about 15 degrees," he points out. One of the new lower-viscosity oils, if approved for a fleet's trucks, can offer cold startup protection down to minus 20 degrees or even colder.

Citgo has done "cold box" testing, he explains, and found that at water's freezing point of 32 degrees, a 5W-type oil is five times easier to pump than a 15W-40 oil. "So you can see how that might translate to less wear, longer starter life, longer battery life, and even reduced dependency on block heaters," Betner says.

Making a selection

Just like 15W-40 once offered advantages over predecessor oils that had been the norm, the new categories of oil that came out in December 2016 are better at protecting engines. In short, they can offer more resistance to oxidation and oil breakdown, where oil becomes thicker under extended high heat, and improved engine component protection at temperature extremes, both high and low. Some can even help trucks burn less fuel.

It began some years ago now as the American Petroleum Institute (API) started work on the next generation of oil specifications in 2011. At the time, oil in the U.S. fell into the category called CJ-4 dating back to 2006. API dubbed the new oil specs "Proposed Category 11," or PC-11 for short, which ended up being split into two categories, CK-4 and FA-4.

CK-4 oil was so named because it came with improved protection and resistance to oxidation and breakdown while being fully backwards-compatible with the old CJ-4 category. It was intended to be an obvious next sequential step forward.

The FA-4 category was named to show, right from the start, a more radical departure from the prior category as a "first of its kind." It offers improvements and advantages beyond CK-4, in part through lower viscosity that reduces friction in the engine yet still protects the engine and its components, with no reduction in engine durability. Less internal friction means it takes less energy—and less fuel burned—to move those engine parts around.

FA-4 oils may not work properly with older engines, although engine manufacturers are still testing these new oils to determine which engines can use them. Today's manufacturing processes are very precise with tight tolerances, and as the latest engines employ technologies to eke out every ounce of power and reduce emissions as much as possible, they tend to run hot and under higher pressure.

So FA-4 as well as CK-4 oils needed to perform in that amped-up environment, and along with the categories came a new performance measure in that regard. "When we moved from CJ-4 into CK-4 and FA-4, the main difference with those two is we started talking about high-temp/ high-sheer viscosity, or HTHS," notes Greg Braziunas, manager of transmission, clutch, fluids, and test-planning engineering mechanics at Daimler Trucks North America (DTNA).  

CJ-4 and CK-4 oils have the same HTHS range. They're designed to flow and hold up at the same rate under higher engine temperatures and speeds of moving parts. FA-4 oils take things up a notch with a lower HTHS range—a lower HTHS rating means the oil will maintain performance at higher temperatures—and have lower viscosity to reduce engine friction and increase fuel economy.

Compared to the older CJ-4 oils, both CK-4 and FA-4 oils have more resistance to oxidation and breakdown. That alone can save fleets money, not only in the long run as they maintain viscosity and protection of parts better and can help prevent component wear, but also thanks to less maintenance.

For example, explains Braziunas, DTNA now allows for extended oil drain intervals of its Detroit 13L, 15L, and 16L engines, respectively the DD13, DD15, and DD16, with both CK-4 and FA-4 oils. For a DD15 on-highway truck in long haul, DTNA called for a 50,000-mile oil drain interval with CJ-4 oil. Now, DTNA allows that same truck to go up to 75,000 miles between oil changes with a CJ-4 or FA-4 oil.

"That's a pretty significant shift," Braziunas notes. It's an extension 1.5 times beyond when that truck would've needed to come into the shop for an oil change before, "and that comes from improved oxidation resistance that we get with the new engine oil categories," he says. Notably, DTNA has its own additional testing specifications for oil that must be met to get its approval and specification—DFS 93K222 for CK-4 and DFS 93K223 for FA-4.

That's a key point, says Citgo's Betner: fleets need to know what oils and drain intervals the engine OEM calls for. "They built the engine; they know what's best for it," he notes. But he also recommends fleets take it further, discussing with their oil supplier what will work best with their particular operations and duty cycles, testing engine oil to evaluate its performance, and even asking other fleets about their experiences with low-viscosity oils. 

Be aware there are different tiers of the new oil categories. For instance, Betner explains, within CK-4 oils you'll find conventional oils, premium conventional oils, synthetic blends, and full synthetics. What's appropriate for a fleet and optimizing oil depends on operations and severity of duty cycles.

Go to Part II: Engine oil's low-hanging fruit savings

About the Author

Aaron Marsh

Before computerization had fully taken hold and automotive work took someone who speaks engine, Aaron grew up in Upstate New York taking cars apart and fixing and rewiring them, keeping more than a few great jalopies (classics) on the road that probably didn't deserve to be. He spent a decade inside the Beltway covering Congress and the intricacies of the health care system before a stint in local New England news, picking up awards for both pen and camera.

He's written about you-name-it, from transportation and law and the courts to events of all kinds and telecommunications, and landed in trucking when he joined Fleet Owner in July 2015. Long an editorial leader, he's a keeper of knowledge at Fleet Owner ready to dive in on the technical and the topical inside and all around trucking—and still turns a wrench or two. Or three. 

And he's never without a camera, or so rumor has it.

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