The Synthetic oil reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Synthetic oil

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A synthetic oil is an oil manufactured for enhanced lubrication performance.

The majority of oil lubricants are mineral oils, mixtures of refined fractions of crude oil.

Synthetic oils are fabricated by polymerizing short chain hydrocarbon molecules into longer single chain hydrocarbons. Their lubrication characteristics can be adjusted by controlling the spectrum molecular weights that going into the finished formulation, which usually also includes thickeners.

Table of contents
1 Advantages
2 Disadvantages
3 Semi-Synthetic oil

Advantages

Manufacturers claim the following benefits for synthetic oils

Disadvantages

The primary disadvantage of sythetic oils is that they cost significantly more than mineral oils. The manufactures of mineral oils argue that this is offset by a long performance life. As synthetic oils tend to be more fluid they are also more prone to leak through worn seals.

The advantages of synthetic oils are only likely to be relevant in high performance applications such as motor racing and aviation, road haulage, or for general lubrication in extreme environents.

Semi-Synthetic oil

A semi-synthetic oil is a blend of mineral oil with a small percentage of synthetical oil. They are desgined to give many of the benefits of synthetic oil without increasing the cost too much.

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