The "V" in Valvoline. What does it mean?

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Valvolinelogo-720x340.jpg


What does it represent? I've seen commercials where they pour from two bottles and then they superimpose that "V" while they are pouring.
 
The colors, It seems as if they were taken from their parent company (Ashland) and Perhaps from Standard Oil way back when?

Look at this picture, they all share the same color, Standard/Ashland/Amoco. Is this color scheme planned this way, or is this some random thing?
Untitled5.png
 
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Originally Posted By: Vern_in_IL
The colors, It seems as if they were taken from their parent company (Ashland) and Perhaps from Standard Oil way back when?

Look at this picture, they all share the same color, Standard/Ashland/Amoco. Is this color scheme some sort of occultism?

Untitled5.png




Don't you draw pentagrams on your sump pan for good luck too?
 
Found my answer.
s-l1000.jpg


The "V" stands for "pouring" and the blue(cold) and the Red(hot) means it protects/flows in hot and cold climates.

No thanks for the help, page 23 google image search.
 
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Originally Posted By: Vern_in_IL
The colors, It seems as if they were taken from their parent company (Ashland) and Perhaps from Standard Oil way back when?

Look at this picture, they all share the same color, Standard/Ashland/Amoco. Is this color scheme planned this way, or is this some random thing?
Untitled5.png




you're joking right?
You are looking at possible corporate lineage for the use of THOSE Colors?
When those Logos were made/used,those were all Strongly AMERICAN companies.
they are all using the same color palate as AMERICA.

RED, WHITE, and BLUE.

Why? you ask...'MERICA! that's why.
 
The V forms a Vector and a piramid in the angle. Corporate symbolism stuff. If you wanna know more, utube Jordan Maxwell vids on the subject. That's a talk form, you know?
 
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Originally Posted By: Doublehaul
Maybe it just stands for Valvoline...and its red white and blue because that's better than commie red and yellow?

It does smell like victory though...much like napalm


Does victory smell like napalm? I guess the N Vietnamese said that, huh?

Russian flag: Red, white and blue!
 
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Single characters don't generally mean anything in English. You're thinking of Chinese. No good can come of that.
 
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