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milky oil

Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2004 9:15 pm
by john hickman
When this happened to me: 1. Water from having the bike sit for too long. I just got home from riding the thing. The oil was clear. 2. Coolant getting into the oil It hasn't happened since. 3. Illegal aliens I don't think so 4. Space aliens We're not talking harley's here. 5. Problems from mixing synth and dino oils I didn't mix synth with dino but I did mix oils. I hadn't seen this before on my bikes but I remember the old v w beetle always had white on the dipstick in winter. John -----Original Message----- From: Stan [SMTP:sm@...] Sent: Monday, February 16, 2004 12:23 AM To: DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Milky Oil That the oil turns milky from water condensate or coolant contamination, and in the former case can clear up nicely after a long ride, is common knowledge (or so I thought). On the other hand, attributing this to the mixing of synth and dino oils, which per the oil makers is safe to do, seems like an unreasonable thing when a perfectly commonplace explanation is available and has not been discounted. I would propose the following usual suspects, in order of decreasing likelihood: 1. Water from having the bike sit for too long 2. Coolant getting into the oil 3. Illegal aliens 4. Space aliens 5. Problems from mixing synth and dino oils -S Jeff Saline wrote:
>Greg, > >I'm betting it's not water in your oil. I'm thinking it's the synthetic >oil mixing with the dino oil. I don't know why I'd think this other than >you didn't have an issue before you did the oil change and you didn't add >water. Did you? I didn't think so. : ) I'm betting that if you let >the bike sit for a day and then run it a similar distance and check you >may have the same milky coloring. Maybe the reason it got darker than >normal is the synthetic oil does a better cleaning job than pure dino >oil. I don't use synthetic oil but I'm thinking it's not the best of >ideas to mix the two when you don't absolutely have to. If this was my >bike I believe I'd drain the oil and add only one type of oil in the >correct amount. Yup, I have an idea how expensive that stuff is but I'd >rather do that than end up with engine problems. What engine problems >you may ask. I'll answer with I really don't know but... I'm not will to >take a chance with my engine. I've mixed engine oils before and never >had a problem that I could identify to engine oil. But sometimes the >problems aren't obvious and may be accelerated wear which shows up after >a significant amount of time. Or it could be seal leakage which could be >mistakenly attributed to a worn seal instead of synthetic oil. > >Oh, in shop class back in the 70s I was asked by the instructor to add >oil to an engine a class had just finished rebuilding. I asked if I >needed to install or check a filter or drain plug. He assured me it was >ready for oil and to just add 5 quarts. Over 4 of those quarts went onto >a nice tile floor. : ) I think the class that told him it was ready for >oil paid to replace the wasted oil. I just got to clean it up. Four >quarts of oil makes a very large puddle. > >Best, > >Jeff Saline >ABC # 4412 South Dakota Airmarshal >Airheads Beemer Club www.airheads.org >The Beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota >75 R90/6, 03 KLR650, 79 R100RT > > >List sponsored by Dual Sport News at www.dualsportnews.com. List FAQ
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