Hi Guys,
Quotes from the AeroVee 2.1 assembly manual:
"The
flat-tappet (non-roller rocker) design of the AeroVee requires an oil with zinc and phosphate levels of approximately
.12% to .14% (1200 - 1400 ppm). Do not use diesel engine oils (Rotella) and do not use oil additives."
"Synthetic oils are incompatible with 100LL fuel and must not be used."
"Approved break-in oils are:
Valvoline VR-1, 20w50, non-synthetic
Brad Penn Penn-Grade 1 Racing 20w50
"Approved post break-in oils are:
Brad Penn Penn-Grade 1 Racing 20w50
Valvoline VR-1, 20w50, non-synthetic
Quote from Penn Grade 1 info:
"It's 1,500 ppm Zinc and 1,340-1,400 ppm Phosphorus contents provide the needed anti-wear protection to critical engine parts, such as piston/cylinder walls, roller cams under heavy valve spring pressure and especially those that employ a solid “
flat tappet” type system."
Quote from Valvoline VR-1, 20w50, non-synthetic info:
"High zinc/phosphorus for anti-wear protection, including push-rod &
flat tappet applications"
Here are the only confusion factors for me:
1) The statement "Synthetic oils are incompatible with 100LL fuel and must not be used." and the fact that Penn-Grade 1 is a "Synthetic Blend".
2) The statement "Do not use diesel engine oils (Rotella) and do not use oil additives." seems to be in direct conflict with what others have had success with. Ref
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvN83Xb2xy8&t=231s. Go to about the 1 min. point of the video to get the relevant point. However, I'm running a VW, not a Corvair, so I'll go with what the VW experts say.
The common thread is the Zinc and Phosphorus content of all the recommended oils *and* all recommended oils are not
fully synthetic.
What am I missing?
Thanks,
Wes