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When I was first driving, I was trying to deal with a noise in the rear diff of my 1971 GMC Sprint (similar model to El Camino) and the rather ancient mechanic up the road recommended I get a can of whale oil. The guys at the local auto supply had a great laugh at my expense.Hey Mac
yes that is the additive, looks like they changed the bottle configuration but still 4 oz. I still have the old bottles in stock. They haven't made it from whale oil in about 45 years I think.
The # changed as well, used to be 1052358, now it's 88900330 about $13 a bottle
When I was first driving, I was trying to deal with a noise in the rear diff of my 1971 GMC Sprint (similar model to El Camino) and the rather ancient mechanic up the road recommended I get a can of whale oil. The guys at the local auto supply had a great laugh at my expense.
-Mac
It was in the 80s and the whale oil had long since been eliminated so when I walked in like a goober, asking for whale oil, the auto shop supply geeks had a great laugh. They were about the same age as me at the time (young) so full of piss and vinegar, knowing little but thinking they knew it all... same as me... Eventually, as I explained what I was trying to address, they figured out to get me an expensive little bottle of additive.Joke's on them, it originally was made from whale oil- way before our time though. They apparently changed it to the present formula because the original didn't stink bad enough.
Starting in the 1950s when GM introduced "Positraction" limited slip differentials, GM sold a product called "Positraction Fluid" which was a gear oil fortified with a whale-oil-based additive. That additive served as a friction modifier and was in the lube as a way to prevent plate chatter in clutch-type limited slip differentials, which were the only type of LSD available in the "old" days.
In the late 1970s, whale oil was eliminated as a result of world-wide concern for a decreasing whale population.
Today, some lubricants work well, as-is, in a clutch-type limited slip, but others need a "friction modifier" to modify the friction between the clutches just slightly such that significant chatter does not occur. GM and other car companies now sell small bottles of friction modifier that can be added in the field to eliminate a chatter problem.
Gary...I noted your post about using 1-2 bottles of FM in Lucas 90-140 petroleum-based gear lubricant.
1) Why is so much needed?
2) Do you recommend that particular petro-based lube in rear axles for which the manufacturer recommends a synthetic?
Hib, is there any sense in using a 'Synthetic' gear oil in a old 86 corvette/ or any GM product ? Getting ready to do this job, I have read that most of the 'Synthetic gear oils already have "Friction modifiers" already in the 75W/90 fluid, in which you don't use any of the friction modifier unless you experience chatter in the differential. At that point you need to with draw some of the gear oil and add some of the additive or friction modifier. This seems to me as something akin to trial and error or seat of your pants kind of chemical experimentation. I think it's more of a PITA procedure. What do you think ? Is synthetic gear oil worth the trouble ? Thank you ! :ugh
FWIW...I use this.View attachment 18428View attachment 18429
Hey Hib
Sorry I didn't see this for awhile. I now use 2 bottles of the GM LS additive because I believe it has changed over the past year or two. The part # & bottle have but I never needed to use more then one bottle with a tuned posi until last year. I tuned a posi and had a chatter from it, not typical with a tuned posi. Before tearing down the posi I added a 2nd bottle of the new additive and that solved the problem. That was the one and only time I had tuned posi chatter and none since recommending the 2 bottles of the new GM additive.
PetroCanada was bought up in 2009 by Sunoco. In Canada, they rebranded all of the Sunoco stations to PetroCanada stations.Also, I believe that the "GM additive" works best with gear lubes having a similar base stock and blending as the rear axle lubricant GM currently uses which, the last time I checked, was a blend of petroleum and synthetic base stocks supplied by a Canadian lubricant maker..."PetroCanada" I think.