Wow ...what a response to a simple question ... which nobody answered by the way!!

For anybody wanting to know ...Nulon Oil and Additives have a particle size from sub-micron to several microns. The D2 centrigufal filter will take out particle sizes of 3 - 15 microns ... so some particles will be removed.
As for the question to use or not ...
In the early '80s and having an engineering background, when I came across a relatively new and inovative product called 'Nulon' I thought I would try it out and dosed up the vehicle I had at the time, a Series 3 SWB running a Terrier V8 . A couple of weeks after I started using the additive I was towing a fully loaded 18' tandem trailer near Lake Nillahcootie (Vic) when the landy lost all oil pressure due to a mechanical failure. After a short while on the side of the road, I decided to push on with the trip back to Melbourne in the hope that I wouldn't sustain too much damage ... in the back of my mind was the Nulon test conducted by RACV with a test vehicle treated with Nulon, oil completely drained and driven from Mildura to Melbourne, then stripped down by RACV only to find no significant damage to the internal components.
Needless to say, I felt pretty uneasy during the trip back, especially tackling the Toolangi hills between Yea and Yarra Glen. I arrived back OK and over the following couple of weeks, pulled the engine down and was surprised to say the least, found no damage whatsoever. Still...it may have been just luck though.
Unlike the Teflon coating on a frying pan, which is applied by basically a spray painting process, Nulon (PFTE, Teflon) particles carried by the oil are deposited into the microscopic pores of an engine or drive train and fixed in place by the action of heat and compression via friction. It does not line the entire oil delivery system as some posts have stated ... it occurs where friction takes place. As with oil, a microscopically thin layer of teflon between rubbing surfaces reduces the coefficient of friction to a level of .04 and as a consequence ... less heat is generated (great thing for engines), far less wear takes place and all this means reduced engine strain.
One post states that oil doesn't wear out it just gets dirty (soot,etc) looses its efficiency and needs to be replaced. The reality is oil does wear out! The oil molecule has been likened to millions of microscopic ball bearings, but is in fact, typically like a wet noodles ...around 12 times longer than they are wide, and when ruptured under intense pressures can leave a surface momentarily unprotected. These ruptures and consequential wear points are on a miniscule scale but over time can lead to wear ... hence fine metal particles in your old oil or picked up by the magnet sitting in the sump. With regard to friction and wear, the simple fact is water is a better lubicant than none, oil is better than water and teflon is better than oil. If internal engine parts were coated in teflon (as with the frying pan example) the coating would be removed in no time... so instead, fine microscopic teflon particles are suspended in and constantly delivered via the medium of oil ... as particles become dislodged they are instantly replaced by other particles coming through and once again fixed into position by frictional forces.
Since my Series 3 incident, I have been leaning towards the use of Teflon being advantageous and since that time I have never had a mechanical failure of any engine or drive train components in any of the vehicles I (or my wife) have owned. Still...it may have been just luck though.
My current vehicle, a 2001 Disco2 TD5 with Stage 1 upgrade and weighing in at 3 tonnes (car & tools) has been hauling a 3 Tonne caravan around Australia on a continous basis since 2010 and I have never had a mechanical failure within the engine or drive train. Still...it may be just luck though.
That being said, I did have the transmission overhauled last year after I blew the transmission hoses off a couple of times (thanks to those great 'quick-connect' fittings) ... dumping tranny fluid everywhere. Even though it was towing OK still, I felt like something had changed and decided to have the transmission rebuilt to be on the safe side as we often go fairly remote. The mileage at the time was 280,000km and I understand that it would have been expected at around 250,000km, give ot take, so I wonder how long it would have continued to provide faithfull service if it were not for those 'quick-connects'.

I ran Nulon Multivehicle ATF (fully synthetic) in the vehicle and found it was a vast improvement over what had previous been used prior to my purchasing the vehicle
I can't ...or in fact, don't particularly want to go out of my way to prove the benefits of using Teflon treatment to others ..... I just feel it's better to have an extra layer of protection than not. A bit like insurance. When you're in the middle of nowhere ... it can make all the difference. If that's what some want to call a 'placebo effect' .... so be it.
As for all of the 'official reports' one can find on the internet .... I would just say that there are a lot of vested interests out there. For oil companies to come out now and start selling Teflon treated oil's would mean that they would have to admit that they have been wrong all along. I think most of us know how trustworthy Oil Companies are.
For those choosing to use additives, for sound technical reasons, keep on keeping on ... and those who think its WOFTAM, well that's an opinion that you are fully entitled to have ... but it's just that ... an opinion.
Dave
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