[AT] STP

John Hall jthall at worldnet.att.net
Sun Feb 25 11:41:06 PST 2007


You may want to consider adding some Lucas oil/additive. I run it in my 
F-150 to keep the lifters from clicking on start up. I also added it once to 
a F-12 that needed the crank replaced--wouldn't maintain oil pressure when 
hot at idle and had already had bearings changed. Obviously it will only buy 
some time in a working machine and the severe cold up your way could be a 
problem on start up.

John Hall


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ralph Goff" <alfg at sasktel.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 25, 2007 1:00 PM
Subject: [AT] STP


> Not sure if I may have asked this question before but I'm wondering again, 
> how many , if any of you, use STP oil treatment in your old tractor 
> engines? The reason I ask is that my Cockshutt 40 has lower oil pressure 
> than I like to see. It seems to be gradually dropping as the years go by 
> even though the engine is excellent and burns no oil. At full throttle 
> running the snowblower it has oil pressure reading just on the line 
> between normal and low. It used to be up in the o to r part of the word 
> normal a few years ago. I don't know if the oil pump is wearing out or 
> bearing clearances are increasing. I do regular oil and filter changes and 
> have always used the same 10w-30 oil since the engine was rebuilt some 27 
> years ago.
> I'm wondering if some of that good thick STP oil treatment might increase 
> the oil pressure or at least provide improved lubrication to compensate 
> for the lower oil pressure?
> Just looking for opinions here.
>
> Ralph in Sask.
> 



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