Aircraft Oil: Go Ashless or Go to the Repair Shop

Ashless dispersant oil really does matter!

Categories: Aircraft, Articles
Top-down view of a cylinder that experienced detonation

Any of you flying air-cooled aviation engines should be familiar with the phrase AD oil or Ashless Dispersant oil. These are special oils designed for aircraft engines and their use will help protect again pre-ignition and detonation. But what exactly does ashless mean?

Basically when you burn the oil, it will completely disappear and leave no significant ash behind. For non-ashless oils, most of the ash left behind when you burn the oil is from additives in the oil itself. Automotive and diesel engine oil designs for liquid cooled engines will contain a lot of additive that are is ashless and it’s not a problem in those types of engines because they don’t typically run hot enough to burn the oil.

Air-cooled aircraft engines are another story. In those engines, it is common for certain engine parts to reach temperatures at which the oil can burn. If a non-ashless oil was used, then deposits from the left-over ash could end up sticking to valves and ring lands. Those deposits could lead to hot-spots in the combustion chamber and those commonly cause pre-ignition.

The dispersant part of AD means there is additive present that is meant to hold solids in suspension so then can either be filtered out, or drain when the oil is being changes. If this additive is not present, it would be a lot easier for sludge to build-up in your engine during normal operation.

While the use of ashless oils won’t necessarily prevent all of the problems associated with pre-ignition and detonation, it is one easy way to help protect your engine from these dangers.

About the Author

Image of Blackstone's founder, Jim Stark
Jim Stark passed away peacefully at his home in Ossian, Indiana on Nov. 20, 2015. He was 73. Jim was an inventor, entrepreneur, pilot, musician, writer, workshop tinkerer, mechanic, and an all-around interesting guy. He enjoyed happy hour (three-beer limit unless scotch was available), playing guitar and the ukulele, traveling and camping with his wife Kathy, passionately rooting for Purdue, hot tubbing, writing stories, John Prine music, and checking himself out of the hospital. Jim and Kathy played music wherever they went on their travels across the country. Jim founded Blackstone Laboratories back in 1985, a successful company that is still going strong today. He was building his own airplane – a Van’s RV12 – just before he died. Jim survived a tour in Vietnam, crashing an airplane, two heart attacks and two heart surgeries, jumping out of an airplane (barely) when he was 70, and the doctors in Indianapolis before lung cancer got him in the end. His spirit is among the stars, and he will be greatly missed by all who loved him.

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