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Is this any good? Camguard Aviation Oil Additive.


waraton

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Might work for a few, where there are more than a few pilots around.

 

Same issues as line rental for constant small repairs when you lend things to people, especially young people short on experience

 

Also i reckon your insurance would go up dramatically once you declare a low hr pilot,

 

Additionally your asking to rent to 4 or 5 junior partners to get to 100 hrs

 

Bit rude to claim bulk of RAA pilots are posers because they dont or cant fly regularly enough to meet your standards

 

Have to assume the answer to the original question is no, there is no one here with experience of the product.

 

 

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Might work for a few, where there are more than a few pilots around.Same issues as line rental for constant small repairs when you lend things to people, especially young people short on experience

Also i reckon your insurance would go up dramatically once you declare a low hr pilot,

 

Additionally your asking to rent to 4 or 5 junior partners to get to 100 hrs

 

Thanks jetjr - I figured someone would bring us down to earth with a thump

 

Bit rude to claim bulk of RAA pilots are posers because they dont or cant fly regularly enough to meet your standards

 

It not my standard - the issue is accelerated wear/damage to an engine due to suboptimal operation, coupled with those who would seek some miracle substance that will will allow the continued suboptimal operation without penalty. I simply stated what is, to me, obvious - not using your aircraft enough? get a partner(s), get rid of it and hire or as Bruce T suggests take on junior partners to help youth into aviation.

 

Have to assume the answer to the original question is no, there is no one here with experience of the product.

Probably correct

 

 

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Aviation Consumer had the following to say

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Industry News

 

April 2011 Issue

 

Story Tools

 

 

 

Also with this article...

 

 

 

By Aviation Consumer Staff

 

Oil Supplements: Worth it for Many

 

We can’t guarantee CamGuard or AvBlend will save you money over the long haul. But both seem to have real merit, albeit with different strengths.

 

Oil leads a tough life. It’s supposed to lubricate, seal, clean and cool the running engine. After shutdown, it’s supposed to protect metal surfaces so the next start doesn’t scrape off corroded material that’s ultimately replaced from your wallet via a premature overhaul.

 

Oil companies will improve the oil as best they can, but their choices to market a case of oil at the right price might not match your preference for long-term

 

 

AvBlend and CamGuard are the most popular options.

 

investment in your engine. The bottom line is this: Is it worth up to an extra dollar an hour—maybe $2000 over the life of an engine—to beef up your oil?

 

We think it is if the supplement in question can back up its claims. Two rise to the top of the pack with approval for certified engines, and enough lab and field data for us to review: ASL CamGuard and AvBlend. We asked both companies for all the data they could supply, and posted a request for comments on our sister publication AVweb.com to see what the experiences of owners and shops have been. The 609 responses we got don’t constitute a large sample, but we feel some broad conclusions can be drawn from these opinions.

 

CamGuard

 

ASL CamGuard’s creator, Ed Kollin, did the initial research that lead to Exxon Elite. (Full disclosure: Ed Kollin has frequently served as a source on oil articles for Aviation Consumer.) That research included looking at red-tagged parts to try and see why parts failed. "Corrosion was 95-plus percent the reason." Even the scuffing problem in Lycoming cams and lifters, Kollin felt, was actually due to pitting on the hard metal that lead to spalling. "Of our top 10 list, corrosion was one through five."

 

Kollin proposed a mix of several ingredients for a protection formula, but it proved too expensive for Exxon. Kollin struck out on his own with a modified version that mated corrosion protection with additives for anti-scuff, deposit control and conditioning of seals. Kollin added the latter because the anti-scuff protection in some oils breaks down thermally into a seal-eating compound.

 

CamGuard has been vetted through a battery of industry-standard tests, as well as modified versions that Kollin claims are closer to the operating environment of an aircraft engine. The results are impressive, in our view. For example, wear protection was increased 10 fold over some base aviation oils and some corrosion tests stopped when an oil-plus-CamGuard mix had prevented corrosion 40 days longer than the nearest competitor. In our short corrosion test (page 11) CamGuard didn’t outstrip oils with additives by this much, but in previous (longer-duration) tests, it performed better.

 

Kollin says that most of CamGuard’s anti-wear capabilities are from corrosion protection. He claims a 30-percent reduction in wear metals is typical when using CamGuard. Savvy Aviator principal Mike Busch has been testing CamGuard in his Cessna 310 and reports 10- to 20-percent reductions. In our owner opinion poll, 165 out of 292 CamGuard users reported a reduction in wear metals in their oil analysis.

 

But this claim is a bit tricky in that total metal must be corrected for the hours flown (since metals accumulate in the oil with time). Maintenance or a change in flying habits can throw off the numbers. We didn’t get enough reports from our poll respondents to independently verify these claims, and results can be subtle, as you can see on page 10. Blackstone Labs took a look for us across the board for wear metals in Lycoming O-360-A4Ms using CamGuard versus those that don’t (they can see CamGuard in the oil). The results were inconclusive.

 

Kollin stops short of claiming CamGuard will free sticky rings, but he says it interacts with fuel residues that cause many deposits to form. Engine motion over time may free parts, which may lead to lowered oil consumption. One poll respondent told us, "I own the largest piston overhaul shop in Australia … when we tear down the time-expired engines that have been running Camguard they all have less deposits, less carbon and less corrosion than engines not using Camguard."

 

Reports of lowered oil consumption and cleaner engines also speckled the results, but not with a frequency that made our pulse quicken. CamGuard did its FAA approval testing (which only needs to show the additive does no harm) using a Lycoming IO-540 doing aerobatic flight for 500 hours. Photos of the torn-down engine looked shockingly clean, in our opinion. Even so, we’re with many of the aircraft owners who say they won’t really know until overhaul.

 

We didn’t ask specifically about weeping seals on our questionnaire, but several respondents volunteered that CamGuard helped with this problem. This isn’t conclusive but it did catch our attention.

 

AvBlend

 

AvBlend’s pedigree dates back to the late '40s (with roots even earlier) to deal with cold-start scuffing issues in auto racers. The product, called Lenckite, found aviation through Ed Rachanski Sr., a funny car racer and builder who went on to found an FAA Repair station, Blueprint Engines, at Chicago’s Midway Airport.

 

AvBlend was field tested for FAA approval at Executive Helicopter in Chicago using a Lycoming HIO-360-C1A in an Enstrom helicopter used for traffic work. The testing ended five overhauls later when the cylinders had 7787 hours on them (one finally developed a head crack). They were just then reaching their service limits. On each of the overhauls, parts turned up exceptionally clean, particularly around problematic valve guides.

 

What’s called AvBlend in the aviation world is also sold for over-the-road use as ZMax. This product got wound up in an FTC lawsuit over claims made by the company about specific performance gains a consumer would see. The silver lining to that suit, as AvBlend’s Ed Rachanski Jr. will point out, is that the company did $2 million in lab testing, which verified its claims for decreased wear, increased performance, deposit control, corrosion protection and more.

 

AvBlend’s test documents show that much of this testing was done with automotive oils in automotive engines, and we can’t say how applicable those findings are to aircraft engines. Looking only at the single-cylinder lab engine (CLR) tests using aircraft oil and ZMax (AvBlend), however, still shows 17-percent reduction in blowby, a six-percent reduction in piston-skirt wear, a two-percent reduction in exhaust-valve wear, and about an 8.5-percent gain in power and efficiency. All were shown to be statistically significant. Lab data also supports wear reduction and corrosion resistance, albeit using automotive oils. In our own corrosion tests, AvBlend did as well as any of the other supplements.

 

In our field interviews, the first thing that popped up was deposit control. "An AvBlend engine sticks out like a sore thumb," said Dave Allen of Poplar Grove (one of our top-rated engine shops). "I can tell because they’re so clean." We asked

 

 

This Lycoming IO-720 has 1600 hours on it, all of them with AvBlend. The cylinder was removed for a leaking base O-ring. It was the first major engine work in 13 years.

 

Allen if he felt there was a higher instance of serviceable parts in these engines. He felt there was probably less wear, but couldn’t say for sure.

 

American Flyers ran field tests on AvBlend in 1992 hoping to reduce incidents of valve sticking. After a cumulative 375,000 hours, the report was a 75- to 80-percent reduction. Current Director of Maintenance for American Flyers, Rick Farmer, says they still use AvBlend with every oil change, and the valves and engines are currently much cleaner than average. Several owners and Bill Middlebrook of Penn Yan Aero reported AvBlend curing valve issues.

 

For AvBlend, 29 out of 92 users reported lowered metals in their oil analysis data. Again, we didn’t get enough actual test data from respondents to assess those claims by press time. However, one owner told us he stopped doing oil analysis because "the readings were so low."

 

Howard Fenton, who sold his oil analysis business to Blackstone Labs, conducted an informal audit of 50 randomly selected airplanes whose owners reported they started using AvBlend. He didn’t see any significant changes, however, he admits he was only looking at raw data without statistical analysis.

 

In our opinion, field evidence for wear reduction is stronger. The company touts Sean Tucker’s six-minute flight with zero oil pressure after a part failure. We spoke directly with Ken Tunnel of Lycon, who does Tucker’s engine work. "From the paperwork and the download [from the engine monitor], I would never have guessed it ran with no oil for six minutes," he told us. "I would have at least thought it would have got the crank." Tunnel treats all new Lycon engines with AvBlend.

 

Turning back to the opinions of pilots who wrote in, we were unimpressed with comments like, "My engine ran to TBO with no problems." Plenty of engines do that. We were more impressed with: "My 2250-hour cylinders were in good enough condition to warrant a credit against my new cylinders," and, "At 1500 hours the engine was torn down by ECi for prop strike inspection. They called me questioning if this engine really had 1500 hours, thinking it was a misprint." There were several like comments.

 

Unlike CamGuard’s cocktail approach, AvBlend describes its product as "a tenacious micro-lubricant with reformulated micro-molecules that penetrate, clean and protect metal from the inside out."

 

According to Ed Ranchanski, Jr., this means it can weep out and protect metal even when the oil would be burned away by the combustion process, and is why it is effective on valve guides and rings. The logic is that better sealing means both more power and fewer blowby products promoting corrosion. It would be interesting to see if AvBlend-treated engines show less lead in the oil, a byproduct of blowby. AvBlend has lab data showing the stuff penetrates bare metal deeper than oil alone. They also have measurements from AvBlend-treated engines showing a fraction of typical valve-guide wear at overhaul.

 

More Options

 

In our corrosion testing, we looked at several other additives on the market: Marvel Mystery Oil, VpCI, Lycoming’s LW-16702, Engine Guard Aero and Friction Master. But this list has limited applicability. LW-16702 is simply an anti-scuff and incorporated into many oil formulations already. VpCL and Engine Guard are primarily preservatives for storage.

 

Marvel is well-known and loved by some, but it’s not for use in certified engines. Friction Master is a Teflon treatment similar to the now-rare Microlon. It’s not currently approved for certified engines, and we haven’t seen enough general data on Teflon treatments to convince us they provide a tangible benefit.

 

One option is not using any additive. We found it interesting that out of 527 owners who tried at least one oil additive, only five percent felt the additive did nothing for them at all.

 

AvBlend retails for $18.95 per can from the company. Some online sources are cheaper. They recommend one can per oil change for most four-cylinder (eight-quart sump or less) engines and two cans for larger ones. The recommended interval is every 25 hours, with a maximum of every 50.

 

CamGuard’s recommendation is five percent CamGuard every 25-30 hours, but many owners report going 50 hours. It retails for $24.95/pint. Unlike AvBlend, you can store unused CamGuard for later changes.

 

Running these numbers out on a Lycoming IO-360 with 50-hour changes, that’s $758 over a 2000-hour engine run for AvBlend and $798 for CamGuard—40 bucks in favor of AvBlend. Try a six-cylinder TCM O-470 with a 12-quart sump and you need two cans of AvBlend. That makes the math $1516 for AvBlend versus $1198 for CamGuard. Change your oil every 25 hours and it’s $3032 compared to $2396—a $636 difference. There are some engines where the delta is larger.

 

And, yes, the only difference in the formula of AvBlend and Zmax is the color of the dye. This is not true of the different formulations of CamGuard.

 

How To Choose?

 

This brings us full circle to our original question of whether it’s worth the $1000-2000 over the life of the engine. We’ll make a qualified "yes." Escaping even one cylinder replacement or getting an additional 100-200 hours out of your engine would pay for the investment.

 

Based on lab tests, field tests and owner comments, we’ve come to a split decision. When premature top overhauls or valve issues are the concern, we’d try AvBlend. If your engine isn’t flying regularly, then corrosion is your archenemy. For corrosion and corrosion-induced wear, our preference would be CamGuard.

 

The trickier question is what to do with a new engine that will fly regularly. Frankly, regular use and frequent oil changes are probably your best insurance. But a supplement could hedge the bet. While it’s easier for us to wrap our heads around the package approach of CamGuard’s formula to the single-solution approach of AvBlend, we can’t deny the weight of evidence that AvBlend delivers on its claims to a measurable degree.

 

Until we have side-by-side data to suggest otherwise, we can only recommend going with the evidence you find most convincing and sticking with the program until something convinces you otherwise.

 

 

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I don't think you can rely on any oil or additive to do the magic you hope for. There's so little left on the parts that give trouble. A diesel tractor is a pretty oily thing. Diesels can generally sit better than say an engine running on Gas. They tend to be very dry. Additives them selves can cause valve guide sticking. IF your pistons are running too hot no oil will save it. the metal will go soft and the top ring grooves flog out. If they are getting mysterious substances in the grooves some of that could be rust and dust. . Nev

 

 

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Goodaye all

 

l should have a artical l wrote for a car club somewhere.

 

Basically the oil companies got rid of a zinc additive because it destroyed catalyic converters when ULP was introduced.

 

This was sneekerly done in the 80's with many new engines knocking lobes off the cam, and the car makers didnt realize why this was happening.

 

l'll try and find it and post it up.

 

regards Bruce

 

 

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I dont think people are looking for magic, we agree engnes arent run often enough and the evidence is corrosion is a big problem. If an additive offers even a small extension to corrosion protection, its likely to be worth it. The less an engine runs the greater the value of protection it might offer.

 

FAA 500 hr tests say theres no down side.

 

Interesting assessment of the LY?? Aeroshell aditive, it is what they claim an anti scuff.

 

No one would be expecting it to fix fundamental temp or operation problems Id have thought.

 

 

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