There is another factor that probably should be considered about oil change intervals.
Conventional multi-grade oils always use viscosity improvers to produce the desired operating temp (100C) viscosity (also referred to as the SAE weight)
For example, any NON-synthetic 10W30 is actually an SAE 10W oil that has sufficient vi improver to raise the weight to operate as a 30wt oil @ 100C
So a 5W30 is 5W, 10W-30 is 10W and so on. the larger the "spread" between the lower number loosely means more vi improver is needed to get the oil to the higher number.
The "wear" or "stay-in-grade" (@100C) capability of the oil is directly related to oil change interval because the vi improvers "wear-out", so much so that the longer the oil is used, the lower the viscosity will go until the oil becomes very thin approaching it's "room temp" or winter temp viscosity. Used oil analysis will verify this.
If you want to know more about SAE "Grade" and it's relationship to viscosity see ---->
https://wiki.anton-paar.com/en/sae-viscosity-grades/The ability of the oil to "hold" contaminants in suspension is also affected based on the "detergent" performance of the oil, that will become less effective as the detergents become overwhelmed. All of us usually change oil long before this happens. Diesel engine oils are a great example of this with it's ability to "hold" soot particles (small enough to pass through filters) in suspension.
Used oil analysis will also show soot levels. Diesel fleet operators do used oil analysis to determine when to change oil in their vehicles. It's worth it for deciding when to change oil for hundreds of vehicles. Not sure if it's worth it for me. A couple of oil changes per year is not all that expensive.
Synthetic oils boast longer drain intervals partly because they do a MUCH better job staying in "grade" and that's because they're "designed" to be a straight-weight oil that simply speaking, does not get (as) thick at room or even winter temps.
So the 0W/5W/10W/20W-----30/40/50 synthetic is actually an SAE 30/40/50 weight oil (with NO vi improvers needed) and stays in grade for MUCH longer than it's conventional oil counterpart.
Those synthetics "perform" like the lower weight oils at the lower temps But are actually the higher weight oil at "running" temps where you actually want to use them.
The ZDDP levels are another issue. They are added to "regular" and synthetic oil as part of the additive packages..... But I cannot add anything to what's already been (correctly) said above!
Camshaft wear is a ZDDP issue that I am sure Ted has extensive experience dealing with! And if I am not mistaken, the most wear occurs when it's not lubricated properly with the "right stuff" at installation and initial "break-in"
Cheers,
Rick
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1955 F-600/272/E4OD// Disclaimer: No animals were injured while test driving my F-600 except the ones I ran over intentionally!
---------------------
This post was created using OpenSuSE Linux x64 and Firefox