Specialty fluids are designed for specific applications, such as extremely high temperatures, high pressure, or ultrahigh vacuum.
Valvoline offers a variety of maintenance products specially designed to help improve the functionality of the vehicle or a piece of equipment and extend its operating life.
Are you looking for a cleaning or lubricating product for a specific part of your vehicle, tool, or machinery? Then, you need a specialty fluid. Specialty fluids are specifically engineered to lubricate a vehicle or a piece of equipment, maximize its performance, and extend its operating life. Based on their formulas and uses, there are different types of specialty fluids. Read more in our blog post.
Brakes are a car part that controls your car’s ability to slow down and stop. As such, they are essential for your own safety and the safety of every other traffic participant. Although the majority of traffic accidents happen due to human error, there are some that will occur due to a malfunction within the vehicle itself. Brake issues are at the very top of the list. Here are some tips to help you stay safe on the road.
Brake fluid selection is a particularly important task of vehicle maintenance. Different types of brake fluids match the requirements of specific braking systems. The most common ones used today are DOT 3, DOT 4, DOT 5, and DOT 5.1 brake fluids. Are all brake fluids the same? If not, what is the difference between these specialty fluids? Here’s what you need to know.
Vehicle manufacturers need to comply with many environmental regulations. Rolled out in 2015, Euro 6 is a set of regulations that aims to minimize nitrogen-oxide emissions. The regulation applies to all Euro 6-compliant diesel vehicles registered after 2015. These cars need to use a special fluid that reduces nitrogen oxide levels. Its name is AdBlue®. What is it and why is it important to your diesel vehicle? Let’s discover!
We all invest in the maintenance of heavy machinery, big diesel engines, expensive race cars and supercars, but what about small engines? An engine is an engine, no matter the size, so maintenance is the only way to keep these small “hearts” ticking. So whether you are a mechanic or just a casual user of lawn mowers, generators, construction equipment and other small engines, here are a few things important to know about their upkeep.
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