Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: Oil Spy -- DIY oil testing kit using Paper Chromatography
britishtrident

posted on 2/3/10 at 01:13 PM Reply With Quote
Oil Spy -- DIY oil testing kit using Paper Chromatography

DIY oil testing using a fairly simple technique, Oil Spy http://www.oil-spy.com/

If you remember doing Chromatography in your high school high class using blotting paper you will latch on to how it works.


As an experiment I tried putting a drip of oil from my tintop on some kitchen roll but as the oil was changed just 1,000 miles ago, and the car runs on lpg so it didn't really show up anything. However a spot of old ATF drained from the power steering showed up metallic particles.


[Edited on 2/3/10 by britishtrident]





[I] “ What use our work, Bennet, if we cannot care for those we love? .”
― From BBC TV/Amazon's Ripper Street.
[/I]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
will121

posted on 2/3/10 at 01:51 PM Reply With Quote
looks intesting, in comercial world we use to have diesel oil tested on large 1.5Mw static generators with 1000litres oil and it was amazing what they could tell, we had one report saying aluminium in the oil and the type as piston ring land adjoining material, when we stripped it down there was one pisting failing
View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
Bluemoon

posted on 2/3/10 at 06:52 PM Reply With Quote
Good find. A few coffee filter papers will do nicely.. I guess the real ones on that site use a proper analytical paper (no idea if this exists) to get repeatable results.

Quite like the real thing mind as you could keep them to record what is happening over many years... Not expensive anyhow (50p each)...

Dan

[Edited on 2/3/10 by Bluemoon]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member

New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.