YakkoWarner
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 29, 2024
- Posts
- 643
- Reaction score
- 1,049
- Location
- Central Texas
- First Name
- Wolf
- Truck Year
- 1989
- Truck Model
- R2500 Suburban
- Engine Size
- 454
Don't know how relevant this is because it comes to me very much second hand, but my father used to always go on about how he killed a 1956 Chevy by cleaning up the whole top side of the engine - he claims the dirt and sludge were the only thing helping it maintain oil pressure and once it was all cleaned up it shortly failed due to oil starving.
This was way before I was even born so I have zero firsthand info, but it sounds plausible as does the secondary theory that in the process of cleaning it up he got residue down in the pan and blocked the oil pump pickup which would have had the same result.
Either way I'd be wary of anything that "breaks up" the sludge in large chunks - if you run some sort of cleaning stuff with the oil, be prepared to change the oil and filter often since all that "stuff" has to go somewhere...
This was way before I was even born so I have zero firsthand info, but it sounds plausible as does the secondary theory that in the process of cleaning it up he got residue down in the pan and blocked the oil pump pickup which would have had the same result.
Either way I'd be wary of anything that "breaks up" the sludge in large chunks - if you run some sort of cleaning stuff with the oil, be prepared to change the oil and filter often since all that "stuff" has to go somewhere...


