AMSOIL Preferred
Customer Mark Tweedale, Neenah, Wis.,
learned about the quality and cost savings
he can depend on with AMSOIL Series 2000
2-Cycle Synthetic Racing Oil after a
hard lesson using Pennzoil-Quaker State
oil in his watercrafts.
The watercrafts are stock Kawasaki
Ultra 150s, bought new in 1999 and
2000. They have a triple cylinder 1200cc
motor that puts out 145 horsepower
with a top radar speed of 65 mph.
"They are Kawasaki's top of the line
muscle crafts," Tweedale
said.
The machines use a race spark plug that
costs "a whopping $15 each," Tweedale
said. "I began fouling plugs almost immediately
into their use."
In fact, he fouled out 30 plugs in the
first year. He took the watercrafts back
to the dealer to try to identify the
source of the problem. "The dealer found
nothing mechanically wrong with my watercrafts," Tweedale
said. The dealer told Tweedale none of
his other Ultras had experienced this
plug fouling problem.
Tweedale began to suspect his oil and
he contacted Pennzoil-Quaker State about
the problem, explained the expense of
the plugs and that the machines were
mechanically sound. "I asked them for
help and possible reimbursement for my
plugs," Tweedale said.
Pennzoil-Quaker
State sent a letter requesting Tweedale
send in some of his oil for analysis.
After the oil had been analyzed, Tweedale
received a letter from the oil company
stating that, while the oil's additives
showed signs of breakdown from aging,
it was not to the extent that it would
foul plugs in his watercraft. "They offered
me no reimbursement toward my plug expense," Tweedale
said. They did offer him a gallon of
their synthetic oil.
While talking with coworkers, he discovered
Gary Yashinsky, an AMSOIL Preferred Customer
in Green Bay, Wis. Yashinsky "had only
positive things to say about AMSOIL," Tweedale
said. "He truly went the extra mile to
help me solve my problem and also to
promote AMSOIL."
Tweedale was convinced. He had the Series
2000 Racing Oil installed in the watercraft
early in the spring of 2002.
"I went the entire summer with no fouled
plugs in either watercraft," Tweedale
said. "Unbelievable. What a difference
oil can make."
He became a Preferred Customer and does
everything he can to promote AMSOIL products
to his friends and coworkers. "I will
be an AMSOIL Preferred Customer forever," he
said. "Thank you AMSOIL for putting out
a quality product which in turn solved
this problem for me."
He does most of his watercrafting in
Lake Superior, the world's largest freshwater
lake. Generally, Tweedale starts his
trips on the big lake at Munising Bay.
He plans this summer to complete a ride
started last year with his friend Todd
Olson of Gwinn, Mich., that traverses
the shoreline along the entire Upper
Peninsula. "We completed half of it last
summer and simply ran out of nice weather," he
said. "It's one cold lake and can get
downright violent at times. That's what
makes it a challenge."
This year, the trip takes them from
Little Girls Point north of Ironwood,
Mich., around the peninsula and back
to Houghton; the final leg covering the
distance from Grand Marais to Sault Ste.
Marie.
When their journey is over this year,
the two—along with Olson's wife, Gina
Olson, and Tweedale's fiance, Kristi
Krajewski, who will join them at different
stages along the coast—will cover nearly
400 miles. That's in addition to a nearly
200-mile trip last year. They plan the
trip in stages because the lake takes
its toll on their bodies.
"We move on as soon as our bodies and
muscles recover from the pounding of
the first (stage)," he said. "We tend
to get beat up a little bit out there
on (Lake) Superior. North winds are bad."
This article appeared in the AMSOIL
Action News, May 2003 |