2019 test4 productsEngine Oil & Fluids

Which Motor Oil Brand Wins?

We compared 4 motor oil options head to head. AMSOIL Signature Series came out on top. See the measured results, the runner-up, the budget pick, and a link to the full test video.

The verdict
Winner

AMSOIL Signature Series

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Runner-up

Kendall GT-1 Max

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The measured results

Every number below is read straight from the test. Scroll sideways to see all measurements. Products are listed in the order they finished.

ProductAnti-wear additivesEvaporation test (200g oil heated to 375F for 3 hours)Lubricity test (bearing wear scar)DetergentsTotal base number (TBN)Cold flow race at minus 40F
1AMSOIL Signature Seriesjust over 1500 parts per million, nearly the same as Kendallstarted at 442.28 grams, ended at 440.00 grams, loss of 2.28 gramsshowed a much smaller wear scar than Kendall, no numeric value givenaround 33 percent more detergents than Kendallmuch higher than Kendall, no exact value givencooked AMSOIL finished barely ahead of new AMSOIL; Team AMSOIL beat Team Kendall by six inches
2Pennzoil Ultra Platinumless than Red Line, no exact ppm givenstarted at approximately 416.87 grams, ended at approximately 414.77 grams, loss of 2.1 grams as stated (transcript garbled the digits as fourteen sixteen point eight seven and four and fourteen point seven seven; the stated 2.1 gram loss matches this reading exactly, kept as the literal garbled transcript figures with this derivation noted)lost the lubricity test to Red Line, showed more wearnot tested8.6cooked Pennzoil narrowly ahead of new Pennzoil early, then Team Pennzoil took the checkered flag, finishing about one inch ahead of new Pennzoil and around three inches ahead of Red Line
3Red Linea lot more than Pennzoil, no exact ppm given (transcript attributes this to a brand mangled as that line, resolved to Red Line by elimination since AMSOIL and Kendall additive levels were already covered in the same sentence)started at 423.32 grams, ended at 420.72 grams, loss of 2.6 gramsfar less wear than Pennzoil, terrific film strength, did a really good job on the lubricity testnot tested10.2cooked Red Line was slightly ahead of new Red Line early; Team Red Line lost to Team Pennzoil, finishing about three inches behind at the line
4Kendall GT-1 Maxjust over 1500 parts per million, nearly the same as AMSOILstarted at 407.07 grams, ended at 404.35 grams, loss of 2.72 gramsdid very well but AMSOIL showed a smaller wear scarnot testedsame as Mobil 1, no exact value givennew Kendall finished ahead of cooked Kendall by less than an inch; Team Kendall lost to Team AMSOIL by six inches

How it was tested

  • evaporation and thermal breakdown test: 200 grams of oil heated to approximately 375F for 3 hours, weighed before and after for evaporative loss
  • lubricity test: bearings weighed before and after, wear scar measured, film strength assessed
  • cold flow race: new oil versus previously heat cooked oil of the same brand, both cooled to minus 40F and raced down an inclined track to compare flow
  • lab analysis of anti wear additive content, detergent and dispersant levels, and total base number (TBN)

AMSOIL did win all three events

From the test video verdict.
Data notes and caveats

This video actually covers two parallel semifinal matchups feeding a final four bracket: AMSOIL vs Kendall (the title framed primary matchup, AMSOIL won all three events) and Red Line vs Pennzoil Ultra Platinum (secondary matchup, Pennzoil won two of three events despite Red Line winning the lubricity test). Both AMSOIL and Pennzoil advance in the bracket. The products array preserves both matchups with per-product notes; the build should be able to split this into two head-to-head pages if desired.

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