I thought ZDDP was not as fancy as Zinc Dialky Dithio Phosphate, but each to their own.
It is not Zinc, it is a complex compound containing Zinc, the same as water is not oxygen nor hydrogen, but a compound of both.
The acid deal is critical, and ALL engine oils subject to blow by contamination are exposed to various acids. An additive is normally included to offset this and neutralise these acids. This produces what is known as the Total Base Number (or TBN if you want to be fancy). It can be added in various quantities, and is the main factor in determining oil life. Once TBN reaches zero, the oil will start to turn acid. This acid will attack the more vulnerable metals in the engine, which is normally the bearing materials as this is where the engine sees a lot of oil, the dimensions are critical and the temperatures are high.
To quote a Castrol add that used to run here, "Oils ain't oils Sol"
There are several types of synthetic oil bases. These are distinctly different chemical types. I can't be bothered researching this again to determine details.
Synthetic oils tend to be naturally detergent, so you do not need to replace as much of the slippery stuff with detergent.
Synthetic oils tend to retain a more consistent viscosity over a wider temperature range. In mineral oils, the additives to create multi grade oils can be in there in quantities that approach the amount of slippery stuff. Viscosity improver's are not lubricants as such, and the fact that synthetic oils need less of this can have 2 results. One is that there is more room in the package for more actual oil or slippery stuff. The second is that you can cover a wider temperature range with the same amount of viscosity improver when compared to mineral oil.
Synthetic oils tend to be more resistant to oxidation (the effect on oil exposed to heat and air). They can either have less antioxidant in them, or they can last longer at higher temperatures for the same level of degradation of the base oil.
In my experience, synthetic oils tend to cling to a surface longer. My very unscientific test for this was that old engine parts were stored in a cupboard for several years. I noticed some were so slippery I tended to drop them unless I consciously increased my grip. On investigation, the slippery ones always came from engines I knew were last run on synthetic oil, those oils being Mobil 1 20W50 or AMS Oil racing 20W50.
Graphite has been known to be a lubricant for centuries, but no respected oil company uses it in engine oils.
PTFE (or Teflon or Poly Tetra Fluro Ethylene) has been around for decades and at least some of the people who make it DO NOT recommend it as an engine oil additive, despite the fact that it represents a large and profitable sales potential for them. When it is burnt, one of the by products of combustion is hydrofluoric acid. This acid is so strong that it is used to etch glass.
Molybdenum Disulfide has also been known for some time and has very good EP properties and anti seize properties. Whenever I have seen it added to an engine, the filter was very heavy if changed shortly after adding the molly.
Regards
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