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International Lubricant Evaluation
ACEA* Lubricant Evaluation

Mini-Rotary Viscometer (MRV) Evaluation

 

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  image of a low torque being applied to the rotor shaft to measure yield stress, and a high torque can be applied to determine apparent viscosity of the oil
 

A low torque is applied to the rotor shaft to measure yield stress and a high torque is applied to determine apparent viscosity of the oil.

  image of how the rotation is achieved by applied load acting through a string wound around the rotor shaft
 

The rotation is achieved by applied load acting through a string wound around the rotor shaft.

  image of sooted oil MRV evaluation equipment at SwRI
 

Sooted oil MRV evaluation equipment at SwRI

The mini-rotary viscometer (MRV) laboratory test method offered by Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has predicted field failures caused by lack of pumpability. These documented field failures have all consisted of oils tested at -25°C and are believed to be the result of the oil forming a gel structure that results in excessive yield stress or viscosity of the engine oil, or both.

 

In the mini-rotary viscometer laboratory test, an engine oil is slowly cooled through a temperature range where wax crystallization is known to occur, followed by a relatively rapid cooling to the final test temperature, as determined by the SAE viscosity grade of the oil.

 

Excerpts taken from page 30, ASTM Guide 44 Analysis of Petroleum Products and Lubricants edited by R.A. Kishore Nadkarni


MRV Test Method/Summary

The mini-rotary viscometer test method covers the measurement of yield stress and viscosity of engine oil after cooling at controlled rates over a period exceeding 45 hours to a final test temperature between -10 and -40°C. The viscosity measurements are made at a shear stress of 525 Pa over a shear rate of 0.4 to 15 s-1. Taken from ASTM D 4684.
 

MRV Test Parameters

An engine oil sample is held at 80°C and then cooled at a program-med cooling rate to a final test temperature. A low torque is applied to the rotor shaft to measure the yield stress. A higher torque is then applied to determine the apparent viscosity of the sample. Taken from ASTM D 4684.


MRV Apparatus/Test Fixtures

A mini-rotary viscometer apparatus that consists of one or more viscometric cells in a temperature-controlled aluminum block is used. Each cell contains a calibrated rotor-stator set. Rotation of the rotor is achieved by an applied load acting through a string wound around the rotor shaft. Taken from ASTM D 4684.


Report

Test temperature and viscosity (cP) or yield stress, but not both.
 

Pass / Fail Criteria

Pass/fail criteria are established by SAE J300, API CI-4, and ACEA European Oil Sequences.

 

 

*Association des Constructeurs Européens d'Automobiles / European Automobile Manufacturers Association.

 

For more information about mini-rotary viscometer (MRV) evaluation, or how you can contract with SwRI, please contact Becky Grinfield at bgrinfield@swri.org or (210) 522-3652.

 

mrv.swri.org

 

Contact Information

Becky Grinfield

Mini-Rotary Viscometer Evaluation

(210) 522-3652

bgrinfield@swri.org

mrv.swri.org

Related Terminology

MRV

mini-rotary viscometer test

ACEA lubricant tests

ACEA 2008 specifications

lubricant analysis

lack of pumpability field failures

engine oil viscosity

standardized lubricant testing

 

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Southwest Research Institute® (SwRI®), headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, is a multidisciplinary, independent, nonprofit, applied engineering and physical sciences research and development organization with 11 technical divisions.

June 16, 2011