The RRC "Cost Effective Maintenance" thread
		
		
				
					
					
				
				
		
			
				
					Yes, I'm starting this as a bit of a blog thread, to document the effectiveness of CEM, used in accordance with their instructions.
For those who haven't heard of CEM, theyre a business in Sumner Park QLD (been there for decades) and produce some maintenance products to help extend engine life and service intervals.
Notably, they make 2 products which are quite well-distributed and have been in use for many years successfully.
However, like any maintenance regime "Individual results may vary"  and I've got a piece of reciprocating junk in my engine bay called a rover 3.9L V8 with 350,000km on it, and it's never been pulled down.
I know what the condition of this vehicle is, having done several 'popular' aftermarket oil system flushes, and tried other snake-oil products over the years, but this is the first time I'm going to give CEM a go, even though I have known about them for years.
Part of the reason I never bothered before was the product cost. it seemed ridiculous, when I could get the same stuff at the parts store in a wynns or nulon bottle and pay less than a quarter of the price and get 3 times as much....
But, as one oil company claims..... oils aint oils..... so too apparently are oil flush treatments.
So, let's baseline this thing, and outline what we want to achieve.
In the past, oil changes are regular 5000km affairs, with penrite synthetic 20w-60 (the old girls a bit noisy on thinner oil) a can of liquimoly MOS2 additive and use mahle filters.  So in other words I'm not a complete cheapskate when it comes to oil changes.
I've always done a routine flush treatment with every change, in accordance with bottle specs. I also use an upper-engine cleaning foam, such as threebond, in the PCV hoses, flame trap, throttle body and plenum, to ensure oily residue is removed.
I decided late last week that I'd give CEM a try, as I was not getting satisfactory results with my regular routine.
Now, some caveats:
1. I do not care about this engine. I have a swap coming soon, so if this engine kicks the bucket, I'm not concerned. in otherwords, if you want to learn from my experiment, by all means observe, but - DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME   I think you know what I'm implying here....
  I think you know what I'm implying here....
2. the engine oil change was done on friday, and it is currently running the full synth penrite hpr diesel in the same 20-60 weight.  I'm doing this specifically to ensure that any carbon remains in suspension, as a diesel engine requires (to ensure it drains out instead of sludging) So anything I can do to improve the ability of the CEM additive is already in place.
3. The additive will first be added as a 2x recommended "shock" treatment and run in the engine over the next 2500-5000km - after having an extensive discussion with Jimmy from CEM about the characteristics of the product, I am more than satisfied my methodology will not adversely affect the results.
4. The additive will be run subsequently on each oil change at the recommended dosage, for 'continuous' use in the sump, not just as a flush.
5. a de-carbonizing fuel treatment has also been purchased. My intention is to first obtain a borescope to see what the piston crowns look like - I'm less concerned about the inlet valves or exhaust ports, I know they will have crap on them at 350,000km, so I'm not concerned about it. I'll start this product after I have a scope and reference pics, and follow the recommended procedure and check at each oil change interval, to ascertain the effectiveness.
Reporting will be at each flush / change.  As I said before, I'm simply documenting the results. I do not care at this stage, whether or not they make a difference. The point is to just wait and see what the results are at each stage.
Engine condition:
It must be noted that the engine has some minor blowby. it's not significant, but can be noticed @ WOT high rpm.
There is a LOT of hard carbon on the valvetrain components and the underside of the rocker covers. lubrication appears to be restricted in this area on both sides of the valley.
the engine is running rich, but I have no intention whatsoever of changing this. The cam is worn, the lifters are noisy, the pushrods are probably caked with crap - it doesn't matter.
Engine starts, runs fine. idle is stable. has leaky exhaust manifold gasket on drivers side - I have replacements, havent bothered to do an R&R on the exhaust yet.
So, with that all being said, today I will add to a warm running engine  exactly twice the dose per litre of oil, and the vehicle will run this for at least 2500km.
The purpose of doing it this way, is the nature of the product - it is an oil-borne surfactant, and is designed to break down deposits, but it can only do so if the oil is cirulating over those areas.  So, in the upper valvetrain area, I do not expect to see an immediate result - if anything, I'm expecing a non-result. But to give it a fighting chance, I'll be running a 2500km minimum drain interval, unless the oil gets really filthy - in which case, it will be documented.
I have no intention of sending oil samples away on this engine - it's simply not worth the expense.
I know others have used CEM, and the results are mixed, but appear to be in support of the effectiveness of the product.  For me it is simply "time will tell".
I'll keep you posted on progress.
Cheers.
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
				
			
			
				Roads?.. Where we're going, we don't need roads...
MY92 RRC 3.9 Ardennes Green
MY93 RRC LSE 300tdi/R380/LT230 British Racing Green
MY99 D2 V8 Kinversand
			
			
		 
	
Bookmarks