beemerphile
New member
... Whether you build from natural gas or hydrotreat and use reactors to produce a synthetic lube from crude. You still have a hydrocarbon molecule. The advantage is that all paraffin is gone and the molecules are more consistent in the synthetic oils. But guess what? They are still hydrogen and carbon molecules.
Ah, the winter oil threads are as perennial as the grass. They can't be avoided, so they should be enjoyed with a good beverage. They only get testy if, or I guess when, someone takes them seriously.
To the chemical engineer, it matters nil from whence cometh the molecules, but to the marketer it is a field of unlimited opportunity - an especially fertile field since in the US they argued and won the right to call oils "synthetic" when they really are not. That way they can sell "peace of mind" at a lower price and woo away customers who do not know an ester from Aunt Margaret.
There is a parallel in the "water industry". Whether the H20 is tens of millions of years old and comes from an ancient aquifer deep under the Swiss Alps where it has been finely filtered over the ages through permeable rock, or it comes out of a process on the International Space Station that starts with astronaut sweat and pee - H20 is H20. The genesis and history of the oil creates a marketing "story" just like the genesis and history of water.
After this spoof was aired, people started calling trying to buy some of it.
In my bikes I use... Oh, never mind. Carry on.