Lube Oil Assignment
Lube Oil Assignment
Lube Oil Assignment
APL Assignment
mineral
synthetic
Mineral oils are refined from naturally occurring petroleum, or crude oil. Synthetic oils are
manufactured polyalphaolefins, which are hydrocarbon-based polyglycols or ester oils.
TYPES OF LUBRICANTS
There are 4 types of lubricants:
i Oil.
ii Grease.
iii Penetrating Lubricants
iv Dry Lubricants.
The 2 most common lubricants with the most used are oil and grease. However, dry and penetrating
lubricants are still in use. It’s important to understand when we should and should not be using these
different types of lubricants.
OIL
It is a thin liquid that comes in different “weights” or viscosity, the lower the weight number,
the thinner the oil. At times, additives can be mixed with the oil to prevent oxidizing and
corrosion.
When to use oil
On hinges, bearings, tool maintenance, sharpening blades
Need lubrication, but don’t want to take everything apart, so you wick the oil into a
small space
If the surface area is wet or will become wet, this will wash the oil away. This is a
common misconception since oil does make things water-resistant. However, the oil
absorbs the water and over time it will lower its adhesion and wash off the parts that
needed lubrication in the first place.
GREASE
It is made by mixing oil, a thickener, (usually a lithium-based soap), and at times additional
lubricants, like PTFE (Teflon). Due to how it’s made, it has the same lubricating properties
as oil. However, its texture and stickiness help it adhere to surfaces better. Greases come
in a variety of consistencies, the thinnest being similar to ketchup, the thickest coming close
to a block of cheddar cheese.
When to use grease
On gears, bearings, chains, linkages.
Need the lubrication to stick to the surface for a long period.
Want to sell out particles of dust or water droplets.
Use the machine so seldom that you may forget to oil it.
Penetrating lubricant
Penetrating lubricant is not long-lasting lubrication, its only use is for infiltrating tiny cracks,
adding lubrication, and breaking up rust.
When to use penetrating lubricant
Loosening stuck nuts or bolts. Whether they’re covered in rust or years of debris, this
will set them free.
Removing chewing gum (it happens), adhesive stickers, and warehouse repair tasks.
Dry lubricant
It is a great alternative when we can’t use oil or grease that will attract dust and dirt. At a
molecular level, the tiny particles that make up dry lubricants (like graphite) are super
slippery. Dry lubricant usually comes in a spray form that’s been mixed with water, alcohol,
or another solvent that eventually will evaporate away leaving behind a thin film of lubricant
to reduce friction.
When to use dry lubricant
On threaded rods, locks, hinges
Need to avoid using a lubricant that attracts dust or dirt
Surfaces may be exposed to extremely high heat or pressure. If this occurs, oils will
start to oxidize.
Don’t use dry lubricant when
The application surface will be exposed to liquids or solvents that can wash away the
remaining lubricant.
Crosshead Engine Oils
Crosshead engines generally burn residual fuels. In this type of engine, separate systems are used
for:-
cylinder lubrication (which is a total-loss system)
crankcase lubrication
Different properties are required for the oils used for these two applications.
Cylinder Oils
One of the most important properties of the cylinder oil is a high alkalinity to combat the
corrosive sulphuric acid derived from combustion of sulphur in the fuel; this fuel sulphur can be
up to around 5 per cent (m/m).. Because cylinder lubrication is a “total-loss” / ”once through”
system
System Oils
The crankcase of the crosshead engine is separated from the combustion side. The division is
achieved by a piston rod gland. Although in principle the system oil is not directly exposed to
contamination by combustion by-products or used cylinder lubricant, in practice some
leakage/contamination through the piston rod gland does happen. In addition, whilst some
crosshead engine designs with water cooled pistons still exist, most of the recently introduced
models have pistons cooled by the system oil.
System oils possess a degree of alkalinity reserve together with dispersant properties. System oils
used in engines with oil cooled piston may be exposed to high piston undercrown temperatures.
In these circumstances enhanced thermal and oxidative properties of the system oil are also
required. Such alkaline system oils have the advantage that they protect the internal engine parts
against corrosion by strong acids which may enter the oil by leakage of used cylinder oil draining
through the piston-rod gland. Their dispersancy properties minimize sludge deposits and keep
the piston undercrown, piston under-space (crosshead gland) and the crankcase clean.
Notwithstanding these properties, such oils are usually designed to have good water and sludge
separation properties so that water and sludge contaminants may be readily removed by normal
shipboard purification processes. Normally the system oil is not designed for oil change at
regular intervals.