GT Pony
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2015
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- Pacific NW
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- 2015 GT Premium, Black w/Saddle, 19s, NAV
Heck, maybe it really is just an oil cavitation issue. That would explain an awful lot, if true.
I was hoping someone would mention oil cavitation again because I have a data point that will help kibosh that theory. There is a member here (forgot his handle, maybe he can chime in) that had the BBQ tick and then ran Ceratec for many thousands of miles, and that cured the ticking right after the Ceratec was added to the oil. He then changed the oil with many thousands of miles on it and ran no Ceratec with the new oil, and there still was no ticking even though there was no new Ceratec added.From a technical, engineering standpoint, oil cavitation is the only explanation that makes sense.
So, if it was oil cavitation (and assume that Ceratec did influence oil cavitation), one would think that with the new oil and no Ceratec that it would start ticking again, but it didn't. Ceratec is advertised to last even after the oil is changed because the anti-wear coating on parts bonds and stays. So what that shows is that again the ticking is influenced by the mechanical friction between parts. If there is too much clearance (ie, rod side) then it's possible that different levels of friction causes the rod to dance side-to-side on the journal and make impact ticking noises. I'm still in that theory boat.
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