Used oil is acidic — and acid sitting on bearing surfaces for six months is how stored engines develop bearing wear before the first spring start.
The right answer is unambiguous: change the oil before storage, not after. Used engine oil is acidic. Combustion byproducts — sulfuric acid from sulfur-containing fuel, nitric acid from atmospheric nitrogen, and organic acids from fuel breakdown — accumulate in the oil over driving miles. In a running engine, the oil’s alkaline additive package neutralizes those acids. In a stored engine, the additive package depletes and the residual acids sit on bearing surfaces, cylinder walls, and camshaft lobes for the duration of storage. At REVCity Auto Storage — 7185 Bermuda Rd, Las Vegas NV 89119, 725-272-1803 — we recommend a fresh oil change as the second item on every long-term storage checklist (after a thorough wash). Here is the chemistry, the data, and the protocol.
Engine oil is not just a lubricant. Modern motor oils contain an additive package — typically 15–25% of the bottle by volume — that includes anti-wear compounds (zinc dialkyldithiophosphate, or ZDDP), detergents, dispersants, viscosity modifiers, antioxidants, and corrosion inhibitors. The most relevant of these for storage is the alkaline reserve, measured as Total Base Number (TBN).
Fresh oil from a 5W-30 quart of Mobil 1 Extended Performance starts with a TBN around 9–11. As the engine runs, the alkaline additives neutralize acidic combustion byproducts. TBN drops steadily over miles. By 5,000–7,000 miles, TBN is typically in the 4–6 range. Below TBN 4, the oil’s ability to buffer additional acid is functionally exhausted and corrosive wear accelerates.
In a running engine, this matters less because oil circulates and the acid concentration distributes. In a stored engine, the oil pools in the pan and films thinly on every internal surface. That thin oil film, depleted of buffering additives, sits in direct contact with bearing surfaces for the entire storage period.
Acid corrosion is temperature-dependent. The reaction rate of sulfuric acid with bearing material approximately doubles for every 18°F increase. A vehicle stored in an uninsulated Las Vegas garage at 95–105°F summer ambient temperature experiences corrosive chemistry at roughly 4x the rate of the same vehicle stored at 65°F.
The implication: stored vehicles in Las Vegas non-climate facilities accumulate engine corrosion damage faster than identical vehicles stored in moderate climates. This is one reason classic vehicles from the East and Midwest often show better mechanical condition than equivalent cars from the desert Southwest when bought sight-unseen at auction — the climate, not just the body rust profile, has been kinder to the internals.
This compounds with two other issues unique to Las Vegas storage. First, brake fluid (hygroscopic) absorbs more atmospheric moisture in monsoon humidity. Second, fuel system varnish forms faster at elevated temperatures. The vehicle that comes out of summer storage with stale fuel, oxidized brake fluid, and acidic oil pooled on its bearings is the one that develops a noise in spring and goes in for a $2,500 repair.
Climate-controlled storage at 50–70°F — REVCity’s standard — slows every one of these chemistry reactions to a fraction of their ambient-temperature rate. Combined with a pre-storage oil change, the engine emerges from storage in better shape than it went in. See our Las Vegas heat damage guide for the broader picture of what heat does to stored vehicles.
The procedure is the same as a routine oil change with three additions. Total time: 45 minutes.
Step 1 — Bring the engine to full operating temperature. Drive the vehicle 15 minutes minimum before draining. Warm oil drains more completely, carrying out more contaminants. Cold oil leaves up to a quart of contaminated fluid trapped in passages and the pan.
Step 2 — Drain the oil and replace the filter. Standard procedure. Use a high-quality OEM or OEM-equivalent filter (Mahle, Mann, Bosch, OEM Mercedes-Benz, OEM Porsche). Cheap filters use lower-quality filter media that breaks down faster.
Step 3 — Refill with the correct viscosity. Use the manufacturer-specified oil for the vehicle. For most modern vehicles, this is a fully synthetic in the manufacturer’s approved viscosity — typically 0W-20, 5W-30, or 5W-40. For classic vehicles, use a high-zinc oil like Valvoline VR1 Racing 20W-50 or Brad Penn Penn-Grade 1 — older engines were designed for high-ZDDP oils and modern reduced-ZDDP API SP oils can accelerate flat-tappet camshaft wear.
Step 4 — Run the engine 5 minutes after the change. This is the storage-specific addition. Running the engine for 5 minutes after the oil change circulates fresh, alkaline-rich oil through every passage and coats every internal surface with new oil. The film of fresh oil on bearings, cylinder walls, and cam lobes is what protects them through storage.
Step 5 — Allow the engine to cool fully before storage. Do not park a hot engine for long-term storage. Allow it to cool to ambient temperature first. Storage with a hot engine traps moisture in the oil as the engine cools, partially defeating the purpose of the fresh oil.
There is one scenario where the after-storage oil change has merit, and it is narrow: very short storage periods of 30 days or less, on a vehicle whose oil was very recently changed before storage.
If you changed the oil 200 miles before storing the car for 30 days, the oil is functionally still fresh. TBN is still high, additive package is still active, and the acid load on the oil is minimal. Storing for 30 days and then driving an additional 4,500 miles to complete the OEM service interval is reasonable.
For any storage period beyond 30 days, the math changes. The cost of an oil change ($60–$200 depending on vehicle and shop) is trivial compared to the cost of bearing corrosion. There is no scenario where leaving used oil in an engine for 6+ months is the financially correct decision.
The “change after storage” myth. Some collector forums recommend changing oil after storage on the theory that condensation in the oil pan during storage contaminates the oil. This is true but misses the point — the goal is not to remove contaminated oil at the end of storage but to never have contaminated oil in the engine during storage. Change before, then change again at the normal OEM interval after the vehicle returns to regular driving. Yes, this is two oil changes. The cost difference is negligible against the bearing protection.
The oil-change-before-storage logic extends with caveats to other lubricants.
Transmission fluid: Change before storage IF the fluid is at or near its service interval. Modern ATFs have long change intervals (60,000–100,000 miles). If the vehicle is mid-cycle on transmission fluid, leave it. The chemistry is less acid-driven than engine oil and the dwell time damage is lower.
Differential and transfer case fluid: Generally change at the OEM interval and ignore storage timing. These fluids see less thermal and chemical stress than engine oil.
Brake fluid: This is the high-priority fluid for storage. DOT 3, 4, and 5.1 brake fluids are hygroscopic — they absorb water from atmospheric humidity through brake line seals. Stored vehicles accumulate water in brake fluid faster than driven ones because there is no heat to boil it off. After 2 years stored, brake fluid water content can exceed 3% and boiling point drops 30–40°F. Flush before storage if the fluid is more than 18 months old, and flush again after storage of 18+ months.
Power steering fluid (hydraulic systems): Generally fine through storage at OEM intervals. Electric power steering systems (most vehicles 2015+) have no fluid concern.
Coolant: Modern long-life coolants (G12, G13, Dexcool, Toyota Long Life) are stable through multi-year storage. Older green coolant (IAT) should be on a 2-year service interval regardless of storage.
Climate-controlled at 50–70°F. Battery tenders, BendPak lifts, 24/7 monitored security. Call 725-272-1803 for purpose-built car storage in Las Vegas.