Blown&Injected said:Or maybe a better analogy is the gold that is plated on RCA jacks on A/V equipment. Platinum is a "finer" metal but does anybody believe that plating RCA jacks with platinum will make any difference over any other metal?
RCA jacks are gold plated because gold does not oxidize anywhere close to as rapidly as most metals. Gold is actually a really horrible conductor comparatively, you put a thin layer of gold cladding on so that you connectors don't develop intermittant connections due to corrosion, which electrical components are more seceptable to.
As for synthetic, it won't save your engine and it has been known to cause leaks in older engines where the gaskets are older. The conventional, dino, oil is really inconsistant in the molecular make up of it, its close when you are talking 40 carbon long chains and you get 37-45 mostly but there is stuff in there thats like 60 carbons long that slips through the process. That stuff kind of acts like stop leak by getting stuck in all the little leak holes and starts causing the shorter stuff to pile up and eventually plugs the hole. Synthetics are far more uniform and as such don't form those nice little plugs as quickly, hense the fact they leak for awhile. Older engines have also had the tollerances loosen up through wear and that causes the finer synthetic to leak through there aswell. If you have an older OEM motor, stick with dino or go for a blend. If you build a new motor, break it in on straight weight, wear it in on dino, and run it on synthetic. 4L60E's are not known as the most durable trannies anyway and its likely that something was on the large end of tollerances and your synthetic oil just magnified that problem. I know Ford runs nothing but synthetic from the factory in its trannies so I'd be inclined to say its more your trannys not the fluids fault for the slipping.
Just my mad musings,