on oil and such things...
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on oil and such things...



Pennzoil and Quaker State are no longer "Pennsylvania Crude" based. I work 
for an Oil company in Ohio, and they stopped purchasing Appalachian based 
crudes about 4 years ago. If you will notice on any Pennzoil container, they 
no longer have any inferences to "Pennsylvania Crude". I used to use 
Pennzoil exclusively, but have boycotted them since they stopped purchasing 
our oil. I now use Castrol.


>From: "Essinger" <maybe@xxxxxxxxxx>
>Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Subject: IML: on oil and such things...
>Date: Sat, 12 Jan 2002 11:59:06 -0500
>
>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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