Dear Wallace
That behaviour of dropping oil pressure when engine is idling and warm up at the same time is according to my mechanic due to low oil viscosity. And that from my engineer point of view has some true on it. Oils as we all know, drop their viscosity when hot, and for that reason their formulas incorporate viscosity correctors to keep viscosity under certain parameters. When engine oil gets old viscosity corrector additives loose their properties, and oils start to behave has they had no oil viscosity correctors at all. For example an oil 10w 30 has a viscosity like an oil with SAE10 viscosity at 0 degrees Celsius. And 10 SAE graded oil at 90 degrees Celsius has very low viscosity which is not good for classic MB engines. The viscosity correctors increase viscosity and make the oil behave like an SAE 30 oil when hot (90 degrees Celsius). That is why when oil is old and degraded we hav the tendency to see a very low oil pressure on the instruments cluster gauge, since viscosity correction is gone and the oil becomes very very light, at a point that it does not lubricate at all this old engines.
These MB engines FROM 60’ are designed to handle very thick engine oil. In the past there were no Multitrade oils as we have today. Nowadays there is the tendency to use oils as 15w-40 or thinner (which is a SAE15 oil with viscosity modifiers to make it behave like a SAE40 when hot).
My mechanic likes to use monograde oil viscosity SAE50 on my Mercedes. With this thick engine oils, engine oil pressure tends to behave much better when car has warmed up completely. And as we do not have freezing temperatures down here in Venezuela it is not important to have a low viscosity at cold.
Regards
L.peterrssen