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"Mark" wrote in
: I think I will be switching to straight 30W oil! Thanks to everyone for their input / feedback. In the Magnusson-Moss Warranty Protection Act 15USC50 section 2300, one of the things it tells the manufacturers and dealers is if you REQUIRE the consumer to use a specific BRAND of oil, say Mercruiser Magic Mix, the US law says they have to give it to you for FREE for the life of the engine. Of course, I assume you are in the USA. So, one of the tactics that has been created to circumvent the law is they all (read that NMMA) get together in their cartel meeting and create a "special oil designation", TC-W3 or TC-whatever only cartel members have control of which limits your choices away from the discounts at WalMart. The TC-W3 game ran for many years before the oil companies knuckled under and paid them off for the rights to sell it. This let NMMA specify "their oil" to the consumers, without actually BRANDING it, which would force them to give it to consumers, and has made a tidy profit in the relabled/rebottled oil business at exhorbitant profits for them all. Before these new warranty laws, the old 2-stroke motors ran for 50 years on Quaker State SAE 30 motor oil from the cheapest place you could find it. There was no special oil at all. None was needed to circumvent the law. Motors all greasy with Quaker State never even corroded, lasting WAY too long to make dealers happy. Lots of them are STILL fishing lakes across the country. So, another tactic to help recycle blown powerheads was the 50:1 or 100:1 oil mix that came in with this monsterously expensive new oil scam. Look on the lake or river and notice how there are really OLD motors buzzing along, still on Quaker State many of them, then there's a blank bunch of years just after TC-W3 was specified up until the new motors that haven't succumbed to the lack of lubrication, which go back, conveniently, about 5 to 8 years, their engineered low-lube life span.... In I/O boats, we just put converted car engines in them never designed to be run wide open with a constant heavy load. They self destruct because they are too light for this service. There aren't many antique OMC, Volvo and Mercruisers with original engines. I/O was a fantastic marketing scheme that worked very well. We got them out of their "inboard" boats, with only one or two bearings, no transmission or gears or seals underwater to corrode, contaminate with water....no pot metal and plastic parts that self-destruct.......and talked them into using an outboard motor foot the water could eat away at, making a regular dealer profit center with its constant maintenance and parts replacements, including the lifting gadgets that always freeze up and fail. The ol' inboards needed a new packing and rubber bearing replacement every few years you could do yourself.... This same mentality is the reason you can't buy an electric car like GM's EV-1, which GM totally crushed into scrap. Dealers were raising hell because the EV-1 didn't need anything but a new battery pack every few years. No, we need piston gas engines that require constant repairs to make up for the selling price we didn't get out front..... |
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