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Collection: About Us
1948
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Every company has a beginning. Before Torco Oil Company there was Bob Lancaster. He invented the first 20w50 racing oil. He made this free flowing SAE 50 motor oil in 1948--long before the Society of Automotive Engineers identified this viscosity grade as SAE 20w50.
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Gus Johnson and his Ariel Square Four |
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This oil was custom made for use in an Ariel Square Four motorcycle owned by Lancaster's brother-in-law, Gus Johnson, who was a competitive rider who raced motorcycles at El Mirage dry lake in the late 1940s. And like other racers of that time, he soon discovered that stock motor oils weren't good enough for engines modified for racing.The stress of high speed in a hot running engine cooled only by hot desert air caused ordinary motor oil to become sizzling hot and extremely thin. Johnson noticed excessive wear throughout the engine as he worked at replacing badly worn parts. He showed Lancaster the parts that had failed and that was the beginning.
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Getting Down to BusinessBob Lancaster learned how to make lubricants from his father, Bill Lancaster and his father's business partner, Jim Wolford. They had learned the tricks of the trade while employed by Texaco. Motor oils of that day were single grade mineral oils with a strong preference towards paraffin base blending stocks. The best of these were 100% pure Pennsylvania oils that were supposed to be the world's finest. Lancaster however, had different thoughts after looking inside his brother-in-law's motorcycle engine. He knew his father purchased tank car loads of Pennsylvania oil from Freedom Oil Company (Valvoline) and Tidewater (Tydol) for blending premium motor oils. The sticky deposits on engine parts and the hard carbon build-up on pistons, valves and heads told him there was something that needed to be changed. But even more serious was the poor lubrication and excessive wear that took place under racing conditions. |
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New and DifferentRacers used SAE 50 motor oil because it maintained oil pressure at high temperature. The oil industry used bright stock to make SAE 50 motor oils. Lancaster wanted to eliminate bright stock and use a different approach to making SAE 50 motor oil. So he contacted Enjay Chemical for a sample of polymer they recommended for increasing the high temperature viscosity of low viscosity base oil. He chose a highly refined SAE 20 base oil that bordered the viscosity of SAE 30 and boosted its viscosity high into the SAE 50 range with the Enjay polymer. The treated oil was clean and clear to look at and slippery. He had been warned that highly refined base oils were inferior lubricants because over refining removed the ingredients that cause the natural oiliness. He would find a way to improve lubrication by adding anti-wear additives. Lancaster had contacted Monsanto Chemical for samples of their oil soluble zinc anti-wear additives. He received two types: alkyl and aryldithiophosphate. The alkyl variety offered a higher degree of wear protection and the aryl variety offered more effective protection against oil oxidation (thermal breakdown) so he decided to use both. That's how 20w50 racing oil was made in 1948. It was such a success in Gus Johnson's Ariel Square motorcycle engine that other racers wanted it. Hot rod owners wanted it. So did the owners of midgets, sprint cars and racing boats. It was a winner without a brand name--"what shall I call it." |
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1950
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Keith Black and his legendary KB Engines |
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When Keith Black switched one of his drag boat engines to a dragster, he encountered piston galling for the first time. Again Lancaster had to face reality--his V-Bloc 50 racing oil could not prevent "black death." Racers who used nitro hadn't found a cure for piston galling, but Keith Black wouldn't accept that and asked Lancaster to find a cure. The first attempt was to put a nitro soluble lubricant in the fuel. It didn't work and the engine belched a cloud of smoke. Next Lancaster began a search for an oil soluble material that ntiro could not wash off of cylinders and pistons. He found an additive and treated his racing oil with it. Then he heated a thick piece of aluminum sheet metal and sprayed it with oil and then attempted to wash off the hot oil with a high pressure spray gun filled with nitro. The oil film survived the washing, so he prepared a test formula with a viscosity of SAE 60 and delivered it to Keith Black. Rod Stuckey, a drag racer from Kansas City, had just arrived at Keith Black's engine shop with a new dragster ready to install a Keith Black engine. The car was towed to Lodi, CA for a drag race using Lancaster's new nitro blend racing oil. The engine survived each race and Stuckey won the final round. No engine had ever run so consistent on a full charge of nitro. Only a few people saw the pistons that came out of Stuckey's engine, but they looked like new. The next morning after the Lodi race, Lancaster received a call from Florida. It was Art Malone who wanted to get some of this new racing oil. |
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"The Colonel"
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Malone was headed for California to run tire tests for M&H Racing Tires at San Gabriel drag strip. He knew his engine would not survive on the oil he was using and wanted to try Torco. Shortly after the Lodi experience, Tom Greer bought a new full bodied dragster powered with a Keith Black engine and put Don Prudhomme in the driver's seat. This famous orange car--The Greer, Black and Prudhomme dragster-became a field testing laboratory for Bob Lancaster who continued to prove the reliability of his nitro blend racing oil.
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“Big Daddy”
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By the mid-1960s, Torco Racing Oil had made its mark in drag racing--in both cars and boats. But now the giants wanted into the game. Pennzoil, Valvoline, Quaker State and the big oil companies wanted the exposure that drag racing offered. They also had the bank roll to buy any drag racing super star they wanted to sponsor. One by one, drag racing's big names found an oil sponsor who also paid them cash to buy engine parts. Don Garlits was the first to switch and Don Prudhomme who was driving Roland Leong’s Hawaiian Dragster was the last to switch. This left Torco with a lot of racers, but the top cars and drivers were gone. Lancaster was convinced that his original 20w50 racing oil was the best motorcycle oil ever made. So he switched emphasis from racing cars and boats to motorcycles and went after Honda dealers who were opening new shops all across America. He selected the San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose area as a test market and Torco was accepted very quickly. Torco's SAE 60 Racing Oil found a new home in the Harley shops and Torco soon became the leading motorcycle oil brand west of the Rockies. The motorcycle industry had reached its peak in 1972 and the 1973 oil crisis caused a downward trend in motorcycle sales. Hundreds of motorcycle dealers were going out of business every month so Lancaster went overseas to Taiwan, Thailand and Indonesia to find new markets for his motorcycle oils. |
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The Uncertain 1970sWith energy saving on everyone's mind, Lancaster explored the potential of energy saving lubricants. He discovered that liquid moly and phosphorus helped an engine put out more horsepower by reducing friction. In combination with zinc, these additives also gave outstanding protection against wear. The combination was called MPZ and it was used in Torco's racing oils to reduce friction and prevent wear. MPZ set Torco apart from all other oils used in racing engines. When the second oil crisis began in 1978 and continued into the 1980s, Lancaster made plans to sell the Torco business. He found a buyer and sold out in 1981 and retired. In 1984 he returned to Torco as a consultant and continued the development of new racing oils for engines, transmissions and differentials. |
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1990
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The end of a Legacy Bob Lancaster
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Racing into the FutureOur products are made using the same philosophies and passion Bob Lancaster possessed over his 55 years of lubrication engineering. As a matter of fact, his eldest son Rob Lancaster is the lead engineer and head of the research and development department at Torco today. Rob himself has more than 30 years experience and continues his father’s legacy in developing the world’s best products. And that is Torco’s promise to you, to continue offering the most advanced and best performing products offered today. |