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My car has been sitting since November and yesterday I did my first DE of the year. When I started the DE, the oil level was at the top of the line and this morning it was down to the quarter mark on the stick. I did 4 25 min sessions and my rpms were 5500-6000 touching rec line once or twice. Is this normal consumption. In prior events, there was little consumption so this seems a little unusual. There are no external leaks. Wondering if car burned a bit more because it had been sitting. No other issues.
1986 Porsche 911 Targa (guards red/black interior)
1993 Porsche 968 Coupe (black)
2005 Acura RL
2004 Toyota Sequoia
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How old was the oil. My wife's Subby uses little oil just after an oil change and progressively gets worse as the oil gets more miles on it.
Tamath. do you remember the majority of the comments from the above thread.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
'61 Triumph TR-3, White with red leather interior; My First Car
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Oil was change mid-year last year. I will change it before next de.
1986 Porsche 911 Targa (guards red/black interior)
1993 Porsche 968 Coupe (black)
2005 Acura RL
2004 Toyota Sequoia
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[quote name='Cloud9...68' timestamp='1335108990' post='125888']
I wonder if this may explain why my car kept showing relatively high levels of "fuel dilution" in the oil analyses I had had done. The analyst told me this was very common in these engines, and that my levels weren't dramatically high for an engine of this type, but that he typically sees this. Maybe the oil that finds its way into the combustion chamber that doesn't get burned and makes its way back into the pan would have picked up some unburned gas along the way.
[/quote]
Because you run much lower A/F ratios when racing, there is available unburned fuel in the combustion chamber. The rings won't necessarily do a very good job of keeping the fuel from getting past them, and the next time the piston goes up, the oil from below can pick up some of the unburned fuel. When I first put the aftermarket ECU on my Mazda engine, I had it running very rich by design to minimize any risk of detonation. I wanted to creap up on the correct fuel settings from the rich side. I must have started below 10:1, my oil very quickly took on a distinctive fuel smell.
As to why it might be worse on our engines under any conditions, could have to do with the way the cylinder walls are created. Microscopically I suspect the rings only touch an exposed aggregate of silica in the aluminum. This could lead to a lot of space on a micro level that could allow the fuel an even easier track to get past the rings.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
'61 Triumph TR-3, White with red leather interior; My First Car
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Catch can seems like a good way to tell how much is being taken in the intake. And I see a strong movement of the forced induction cars to the use of a catch can. If I remember correctly isn't it to keep the oil being taken in via the intake from increasing liklihood of detonation.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
'61 Triumph TR-3, White with red leather interior; My First Car