SOUTHWEST RESEARCH INSTITUTE

 

Heavy-Duty Engine Lubricant
Fuel Economy Assessment

 

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  image of additional trucks and test laps added to a program to improve repeatability and confidence of final results
 

Additional trucks and test laps can be added to a program to improve repeatability and confidence of final results.

Using test methods currently available to the industry and two commercially available heavy-duty engine oils, Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) investigated lubricant-related fuel economy.


Fuel Economy Test Procedures

The SAE J1321 on-highway fuel economy test procedures were used in a fleet of four heavy-duty trucks. Fuel economy benefit was defined relative to CEC RL 191, the baseline candidate reference oil for the European light-duty gasoline engine fuel economy test procedure, CEC L-54-T-96 (Mercedes M111).

 

  image of automotive engines at SwRI being run on specialized test stands equipped with computer control and computer data acquisition
 

Automotive engines are run on specialized test stands equipped with computer control and computer data acquisition.

Fuel economy improvement values were computed from the on-highway test results. Testing the same two lubricants in stationary engine dynamometer tests using the Mercedes M111 and the ASTM Sequence VIB test procedures also served as a crosscheck.


Fuel Economy Test Results

  • SAE J1321, CEC M111, and ASTM Sequence VIB test procedures all ranked Lubricant A and Lubricant B in the same order for fuel economy performance.

  • The CEC M111 fuel economy test procedure may be useful for heavy-duty engine applications, primarily because of the SAE 15W-40 baseline reference oil.

  • The ASTM Sequence VIB test procedure may be useful for heavy-duty application if it is conducted in tandem with a heavy-duty lubricant of known fuel economy performance.

  • A strong linear correlation (R2 = 0.96) was found to exist between the Mercedes M111 (19 hr) and the Sequence VIB (96 hr) fuel economy results.
     

    image of graph showing SAE J1321 Fuel Economy Improvement

    SAE J1321 Fuel Economy Improvement

     
    image of graph showing linear relationship between Sequence VIB (96 hr) and M111 (19 hr) fuel economy 

    Linear relationship between Sequence VIB (96 hr) and 
    M111 (19 hr) fuel economy

For more information about heavy-duty engine lubricant fuel economy assessment capabilities at SwRI or how you can contract with SwRI, please contact Larry Eckhardt at leckhardt@swri.org or (210) 522-2980.
 

Contact Information

Larry Eckhardt

Specialized Engine Lubricants

(210) 522-2980

leckhardt@swri.org

Related Terminology

fuel economy test
procedure

engine lubricant

SAE J1321 test procedure

on-highway fuel 
economy

fuel economy
improvement

Mercedes M111

ASTM Sequence VIB

CEC M111

heavy-duty engine

| Fuels and Driveline Lubricants Research Department | Fuels and Lubricants Research Division | SwRI Home |

Southwest Research Institute® (SwRI®), headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, is a multidisciplinary, independent, nonprofit, applied engineering and physical sciences research and development organization with 12 technical divisions.

August 04, 2009