MAN Supports Castrol Marine’s Misapplication Advice, UK

MAN Supports Castrol Marine’s Misapplication Advice

Castrol Marine announced new recommendations to ship-owners from MAN Diesel & Turbo, the world’s largest supplier of two stroke marine engines, supporting Castrol’s longstanding advice that misapplication of mid-range Base Number (BN) cylinder oils can cause corrosion.

The engine manufacturer recently issued service letters that recommend “cylinder lube oil with 70BN or higher” for latest generation super long stroke engines using higher sulphur fuel (above 1.5%-2%). MAN says it “cannot recommend” cylinder oils “with a BN level between 50 and 60” for these engines.

Ship-owners have been persuaded to try a host of new mid-range lubricants on the basis that they offer a solution across the range of sulphur content in fuel oil, including during slow steaming operations. In contrast, Castrol Marine introduced Cyltech 80AW earlier this year, an 80BN oil addressing lubricant performance issues identified under slow steaming conditions when using HFO towards the top end of the permissible range.

In a letter to customers on lubricant performance across its engine portfolio, MAN says of 50-60BN oils: “oil wear varies significantly between engine types and between operational conditions”. Although mid-range lubricants were sometimes reliable “the test results from the mid-range cylinder oils can therefore not be transferred to general guidelines”.

Another letter from MAN questions the ‘mid-range fits all’ proposition. It says: “At present, we cannot recommend these new type oils on our newest engine designs: Mark 9 and further e.g. S80ME-C9; all G-engines.”

According to MAN: “MAN B&W two-stroke design is therefore based on optimisation of the amount of a BN70 cylinder oil for fuel sulphur content above 1.5-2% and a BN 40 cylinder oil for lower sulphur content.” Oils with a viscosity lower than SAE 50 are also not recommended for Mark 9 or G-type engines.

[mappress]

Press Release, November 23, 2012