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How Engine Oil Becomes Engine Sludge Charleston WV

Fresh engine oil is a clear, free-flowing liquid blend of base stock and additives that contains no fuel, water, coolant, dirt or other contaminants. In engines that have failed prematurely, the oil has very often been transformed into a high viscosity deposit of brown or black goo, commonly referred to as "sludge."

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816 Lee St E
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Engine & Transmission Express
(304) 342-7711, 001-2004
708 Virginia Street West
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Appalachian Tire Products Inc
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27 Clendenin St
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200 Quarrier St
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900 Morris St
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200 MacCorkle Ave. S.E.
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817 Washington St E
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Cottman Transmissions
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128 East Church Street
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Firestone Complete Auto Care Store
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817 Washington St E
Charleston, WV
Ben Pauls Annex Transmission
(304) 744-5781
434 3rd
Charleston, WV
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How Engine Oil Becomes Engine Sludge

By Don Fedak  
July 01, 2004

Fresh engine oil is a clear, free-flowing liquid blend of base stock and additives that contains no fuel, water, coolant, dirt or other contaminants. In engines that have failed prematurely, the oil has very often been transformed into a high viscosity deposit of brown or black goo, commonly referred to as "sludge."

When regular engine oil changes are neglected, normally free-flowing lubricating oil breaks down, becomes contaminated, ceases to flow and is transformed into a thick soup of waste products. That's when serious engine damage is imminent.

Why does engine oil break down, combine with contaminants and form sludge deposits? Chemistry teaches us that engine oil is unstable and decomposes in the presence of oxygen at high temperatures. The process, called oxidation, occurs naturally after exposure to normal operating conditions for extended periods of time and is accelerated by exposure to severe operating conditions or to excessively high temperatures. Alternatively, accelerated oxidation may be triggered by a combination of any or all of these factors.



During oxidation, the chemical bonds that define the oil molecules are broken and some of the reaction products accumulate and interact to form a highly viscous complex mixture of solids, liquids and gases that contain a variety of solid carbon-based dirt and metallic particles, as well as liquid coolant, fuel, oil and water droplets.

But what can technic...

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